Long term effects of exposure to automobile exhaust on the pulmonary function of female adults in Tokyo, Japan
Open Access
- 18 March 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by BMJ in Occupational and Environmental Medicine
- Vol. 61 (4) , 350-357
- https://doi.org/10.1136/oem.2002.005934
Abstract
Aims: To investigate the chronic effects of air pollution caused mainly by automobiles in healthy adult females. Methods: Respiratory symptoms were investigated in 5682 adult females who had lived in the Tokyo metropolitan area for three years or more in 1987; 733 of them were subjected to pulmonary function tests over eight years from 1987 to 1994. The subjects were divided into three groups by the level of air pollution they were exposed to during the study period. The concentrations of nitrogen dioxide and suspended particulate matter were the highest in group 1, and the lowest in group 3. Results: The prevalence rates of respiratory symptoms in group 1 were higher than those in groups 2 and 3, except for wheezing. Multiple logistic regression analysis showed significant differences in persistent phlegm and breathlessness. The subjects selected for the analysis of pulmonary function were 94, 210, and 102 females in groups 1, 2, and 3, respectively. The annual mean change of FEV1 in group 1 was the largest (−0.020 l/y), followed by that in group 2 (−0.015 l/y), and that in group 3 (−0.009 l/y). Testing for trends showed a significant larger decrease of FEV1 with the increase in the level of air pollution. Conclusions: The subjects living in areas with high levels of air pollution showed higher prevalence rates of respiratory symptoms and a larger decrease of FEV1 compared with those living in areas with low levels of air pollution. Since the traffic density is larger in areas with high air pollution, the differences among the groups may reflect the effect of air pollution attributable to particulate matter found in automobile exhaust.Keywords
This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- Indoor nitrogen dioxide in homes along trunk roads with heavy traffic.Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 1998
- The Association between Self-Reported Symptoms of Asthma and Allergic Rhinitis and Self-Reported Traffic Density on Street of Residence in AdolescentsEpidemiology, 1996
- Effects on symptoms and lung function in humans experimentally exposed to diesel exhaust.Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 1996
- Biological effects of diesel exhaust particles (DEP). III. Pathogenesis of asthma like symptoms in miceFree Radical Biology & Medicine, 1996
- Traffic-Related Air Pollution: Exposure and Health Effects in Copenhagen Street Cleaners and Cemetery WorkersArchives of environmental health, 1995
- Pulmonary Function and Ambient Particulate Matter: Epidemiological Evidence from NHANES IArchives of environmental health, 1991
- Epidemiological-environmental study of diesel bus garage workers: Chronic effects of diesel exhaust on the respiratory systemEnvironmental Research, 1987
- Nitrogen dioxide distribution in street canyonsAtmospheric Environment (1967), 1987
- The Health Effects of Automobile Exhaust. VI. Relationship of Respiratory Symptoms and Pulmonary Function in Tunnel and Turnpike WorkersArchives of environmental health, 1983
- Twelve Years Spirometric Changes Among Paris Area WorkersInternational Journal of Epidemiology, 1979