Cardiovascular and pulmonary health effects of air pollution - long term effects in Sweden and effects of wood smoke
Abstract
Exposure to air pollution is associated with increased morbidity and mortality
in cardiovascular and pulmonary diseases. Main suggested mechanisms are
airway and systemic inflammation, affecting hemostasis in the short term and
atherosclerosis in the long term. Few studies have investigated the effects
over decades, or which time-windows of exposure are the most relevant. In
Sweden and many other countries wood burning is one of the largest sources
of air pollution. The main aims of this thesis are to increase the knowledge of
the mechanisms through which wood smoke causes respiratory and
cardiovascular diseases, and the effects of long-term exposure to air pollution
in a Swedish cohort.
In an experimental chamber study in healthy adults, short-term exposure to
two types of wood smoke was associated with symptoms and biomarkers of
airway effects, but not with biomarkers of systemic inflammation or
coagulation. This indicated that relatively low doses of wood smoke induce
effects on airway epithelial permeability and possibly airway inflammation.
In a long-term cohort study of residential exposure to nitric oxides (NOx) in
Gothenburg, we observed a time trend of decreasing exposure. Back
extrapolation of exposure was fairly correct for 5-7 years but not for longer
time spans, showing that historical dispersion models and residential history
are important for accurate long-term exposure estimations. Total nonaccidental
mortality was associated with residential NOx exposure. The effect
estimates were similar for NOx exposure the last year, the mean NOx
exposure the last 5 years, and the mean NOx exposure since enrolment. The
effect estimates for cause-specific cardiovascular mortality were similar to
those for total mortality. The effect was near linear with no evidence of any
threshold, and only marginally affected by confounders and effect modifiers.
Parts of work
I. Stockfelt L, Sallsten G, Olin A-C, Almerud P, Samuelsson L, Johannesson S, Molnár P, Strandberg B, Almstrand A-C, Bergemalm-Rynell K, Barregard L. Effects on airways of
short-term exposure to two kinds of wood smoke in a chamber study of healthy humans. Inhalation Toxicology 2012; 24, 47-59. ::PMID::22220980 II. Stockfelt L, Sallsten G, Almerud P, Basu S, Barregard L. Short-term chamber exposure to low doses of two kinds of wood smoke does not induce systemic inflammation, coagulation or oxidative stress in healthy humans. Inhalation
Toxicology 2013; 25, 417-425. ::PMID::23808634 III. Molnár P, Stockfelt L, Barregard L, Sallsten G. Residential NOx exposure in a 35-year cohort study. Changes of
exposure, and comparison with back extrapolation for historical exposure assessment. Atmospheric Environment
2015; 115, 62-69. ::doi::10.1016/j.atmosenv.2015.05.055 IV. Stockfelt L, Andersson EM, Molnár P, Rosengren A, Wilhelmsen L, Sallsten G, Barregard L. Long term effects of residential NOx exposure on total and cause-specific
mortality and incidence of myocardial infarction in a Swedish cohort. Environmental Research 2015; 142, 197-
206. ::PMID::26163761
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy (Medicine)
University
University of Gothenburg. Sahlgrenska Academy
Institution
Institute of Medicine. Department of Public Health and Community Medicine
Disputation
Fredagen den 18 mars 2016, kl 9.00, Sal Hamberger, Medicinaregatan 16A, Göteborg
Date of defence
2016-03-18
leo.stockfelt@amm.gu.se
Date
2016-02-24Author
Stockfelt, Leo
Keywords
Air pollution
wood smoke
human exposure studies
dispersion modelling
cohort studies
cardiovascular disease
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-628-9726-0 (printed)
978-91-628-9797-7 (e-publ)
Language
eng