Respiratory symptoms and peak expiratory flow in children with asthma in relation to volatile organic compounds in exhaled breath and ambient air

被引:0
|
作者
Ralph J Delfino
Henry Gong
William S Linn
Ye Hu
Edo D Pellizzari
机构
[1] College of Medicine,Epidemiology Division, Department of Medicine
[2] University of California,Department of Preventive Medicine
[3] Keck School of Medicine,undefined
[4] University of Southern California,undefined
[5] and Environmental Health Service,undefined
[6] Los Amigos Research and Education Institute,undefined
[7] Analytical and Chemical Sciences,undefined
[8] and Exposure Analysis Research Program,undefined
[9] Research Triangle Institute,undefined
[10] Research Triangle Park,undefined
来源
Journal of Exposure Science & Environmental Epidemiology | 2003年 / 13卷
关键词
epidemiology; panel study; exposure biomarkers; hazardous air pollutants; air pollution.;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Indoor volatile organic compounds (VOCs) have been associated with asthma, but there is little epidemiologic work on ambient exposures, and no data on relationships between respiratory health and exhaled breath VOCs, which is a biomarker of VOC exposure. We recruited 26 Hispanic children with mild asthma in a Los Angeles community with high VOC levels near major freeways and trucking routes. Two dropped out, three had invalid peak expiratory flow (PEF) or breath VOC data, leaving 21. Children filled out symptom diaries and performed PEF maneuvers daily, November 1999–January 2000. We aimed to collect breath VOC samples on asthma episode and baseline symptom-free days, but six subjects only gave samples on symptom-free days. We analyzed 106 breath samples by GC–MS. Eight VOCs were quantifiable in >75% of breath samples (benzene, methylene chloride, styrene, tetrachloroethylene, toluene, m,p-xylene, o-xylene, and p-dichlorobenzene). Generalized estimating equation and mixed linear regression models for VOC exposure–response relationships controlled for temperature and respiratory infections. We found marginally positive associations between bothersome or more severe asthma symptoms and same day breath concentrations of benzene [odds ratio (OR) 2.03, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.80, 5.11] but not other breath VOCs. Ambient petroleum-related VOCs measured on the same person-days as breath VOCs showed notably stronger associations with symptoms, including toluene, m,p-xylene, o-xylene, and benzene (OR 5.93, 95% CI 1.64, 21.4). On breath sample days, symptoms were also associated with 1-h ambient NO2, OR 8.13 (1.52, 43.4), and SO2, OR 2.36 (1.16, 4.81). Consistent inverse relationships were found between evening PEF and the same ambient VOCs, NO2, and SO2. There were no associations with O3. Given the high traffic density of the region, stronger associations for ambient than for breath VOCs suggest that ambient VOC measurements were better markers for daily exposure to combustion-related compounds thought to be causally related to acute asthma. Alternatively, the low sample size of symptom responses (15–21 responses per 108 breath samples) may have led to the nonsignificant results for breath VOCs.
引用
收藏
页码:348 / 363
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Respiratory symptoms and peak expiratory flow in children with asthma in relation to volatile organic compounds in exhaled breath and ambient air
    Delfino, RJ
    Gong, H
    Linn, WS
    Hu, Y
    Pellizzari, ED
    JOURNAL OF EXPOSURE ANALYSIS AND ENVIRONMENTAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2003, 13 (05): : 348 - 363
  • [2] Relation between ambient air and breath volatile organic compounds
    Dhondt, H.
    Goelen, E.
    Koppen, G.
    Verschaeve, L.
    ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH RISK IV, 2007, 11 : 33 - +
  • [3] Volatile organic compounds in exhaled breath as a diagnostic tool for asthma in children
    Dallinga, J. W.
    Robroeks, C. M. H. H. T.
    van Berkel, J. J. B. N.
    Moonen, E. J. C.
    Godschalk, R. W. L.
    Jobsis, Q.
    Dompeling, E.
    Wouters, E. F. M.
    van Schooten, F. J.
    CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL ALLERGY, 2010, 40 (01): : 68 - 76
  • [4] Effects of ambient air pollution on upper and lower respiratory symptoms and peak expiratory flow in children
    Boezen, HM
    van der Zee, SC
    Postma, DS
    Vonk, JM
    Gerritsen, J
    Hoek, G
    Brunekreef, B
    Rijcken, B
    Schouten, JP
    LANCET, 1999, 353 (9156): : 874 - 878
  • [5] Measurement of volatile organic compounds in exhaled breath of children of the ALL Age Asthma Cohort
    Ehrmann, Maximilian
    Von Mutius, Erika
    Hansen, Gesine
    Kopp, Matthias
    Hohlfeld, Jens M.
    Holz, Olaf
    Fuchs, Oliver
    EUROPEAN RESPIRATORY JOURNAL, 2018, 52
  • [6] Analysis of Volatile Organic Compounds in Exhaled Breath as a Diagnostic Tool for Asthma in Children.
    Dallinga, J. W.
    Robroeks, M. H. H. T.
    van Berkel, J. J. B. N.
    Moonen, E. J.
    Godschalk, R. W. L.
    Jobsis, Q.
    Dompeling, E.
    Wouters, E. F. M.
    van Schooten, F. J.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF RESPIRATORY AND CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2009, 179
  • [7] Expiratory flow rate and breath hold affect exhaled volatile organic compounds (VOC) in healthy subjects
    Bikov, Andras
    Paschalaki, Koralia
    Kharitonov, Sergei
    Sinclair, Ron Logan
    Horvath, Ildiko
    Usmani, Omar
    Barnes, Peter
    Paredi, Paolo
    EUROPEAN RESPIRATORY JOURNAL, 2012, 40
  • [8] RELATION OF PEAK EXPIRATORY FLOW-RATES AND SYMPTOMS TO AMBIENT OZONE
    KRZYZANOWSKI, M
    QUACKENBOSS, JJ
    LEBOWITZ, MD
    ARCHIVES OF ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH, 1992, 47 (02): : 107 - 115
  • [9] Volatile Organic Compounds in Exhaled Breath as Fingerprints of Lung Cancer, Asthma and COPD
    Ratiu, Ileana Andreea
    Ligor, Tomasz
    Bocos-Bintintan, Victor
    Mayhew, Chris A.
    Buszewski, Boguslaw
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE, 2021, 10 (01) : 1 - 41
  • [10] Profiling of Volatile Organic Compounds in Exhaled Breath As a Strategy to Find Early Predictive Signatures of Asthma in Children
    Smolinska, Agnieszka
    Klaassen, Ester M. M.
    Dallinga, Jan W.
    van de Kant, Kim D. G.
    Jobsis, Quirijn
    Moonen, Edwin J. C.
    van Schayck, Onno C. P.
    Dompeling, Edward
    van Schooten, Frederik J.
    PLOS ONE, 2014, 9 (04):