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Environmental Health Perspectives Volume 107, Number 8, August 1999 Open Access
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The Adverse Effect of Low Levels of Ambient Air Pollutants on Lung Function Growth in Preadolescent Children

Wieslaw Jedrychowski, Elzbieta Flak, and Elzbieta Mróz

Chair of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, Collegium Medicum in Jagiellonian University, Kraków, Poland

Abstract

The main purpose of our study was to assess the effect of low concentrations of ambient air pollution on lung function growth in preadolescent children. We accounted for height velocity over the follow-up period and also for other possible confounders such as baseline anthropometric and physiologic characteristics of children. In addition to outdoor air pollution, we considered the possible effects of social class and exposure to indoor pollutants such as gas stove fumes or environmental tobacco smoke. The cohort prospective study was carried out in 1,001 preadolescent children from two areas of Krakow, Poland, that differed in ambient air pollutants. In the city center (higher pollution area) , the mean annual level [± standard deviation (SD) ] of suspended particulate matter was 52.6 ± 53.98 µg/m3 and that of SO2 was 43.87 ± 32.69 µg/m3 ; the corresponding values in the control area were 33.23 ± 35.99 µg/m3 and 31.77 ± 21.93 µg/m3. Mean lung function growth rate adjusted to height velocity and lung function level at the study entry was significantly lower in boys and girls living in the more polluted areas. Also, the proportion of children with the slower lung function growth (SLFG) was higher in the children from the more polluted area of the city. The analysis completed in the group of children after the exclusion of asthmatic subjects and those with asthmalike symptoms confirmed that, in boys, odds ratios (ORs) for SLFG [forced vital capacity (FVC) ] and air pollution after adjustment to baseline FVC, height, and growth rate was significant [OR = 2.15 ; 95% confidence interval (CI) , 1.25-3.69) ]. The analysis also confirmed that for SLFG(FEV1) the OR was 1.90 (CI, 1.12-3.25) . The corresponding OR values in girls were insignificant (OR = 1.50 ; CI, 0.84-2.68 and OR = 1.39 ; CI, 0.78-2.44) . The association between ambient pollutants and poorer gain of pulmonary volumes in children living in more polluted areas suggests that air pollution in the residence area may be a part of the causal chain of reactions leading to retardation in pulmonary function growth during the preadolescent years. Key words: , , , , . Environ Health Perspect 107:669-674 (1999) . [Online 2 July 1999]

http://ehpnet1.niehs.nih.gov/docs/1999/107p669-674jedrychowski/ abstract.html

Address correspondence to W. Jedrychowski, Chair of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, College of Medicine Jagiellonian University, 7 Kopernika Street, Kraków, Poland. Telephone: 48 12 4231-003. Fax: 48 12 4228-795. E-mail: myjedryc@cyf-kr.edu.pl

This study was financially supported by the grant from the U.S.-Polish Maria Sklodowska-Curie Foundation (no. MZ/HHS-94-178) . Principal investigator W. Jedrychowski ; principal coinvestigators J. Wesolowski (University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, and U.S. Committee on Poland's Development) and K-S. Liu (California Department of Health Services, Berkeley, CA, and U.S. Committee on Poland's Environment) .

Received 30 November 1998 ; accepted 5 April 1999.


The full version of this article is available for free in HTML format.
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