Landscape fire PM2.5 and hospital admissions for cause-specific cardiovascular disease in urban China

There is a growing interest in the health impacts of PM 2.5 originating from landscape fires. We conducted a time-series study to investigate the association between daily exposure to landscape fire PM 2.5 and hospital admissions for cardiovascular events in 184 major Chinese cities. We developed a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2024-11, Vol.15 (1), p.9604-8, Article 9604
Hauptverfasser: Tian, Yaohua, Ma, Yudiyang, Xu, Rongbin, Wu, Yao, Li, Shanshan, Hu, Yonghua, Guo, Yuming
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:There is a growing interest in the health impacts of PM 2.5 originating from landscape fires. We conducted a time-series study to investigate the association between daily exposure to landscape fire PM 2.5 and hospital admissions for cardiovascular events in 184 major Chinese cities. We developed a machine learning model combining outputs from chemical transport models, meteorological information and observed air pollution data to determine daily concentrations of landscape fire PM 2.5 . Furthermore, we fitted quasi-Poisson regression to evaluate the link between landscape fire PM 2.5 concentrations and cardiovascular hospitalizations in each city, and conducted random-effects meta-analysis to pool the city-specific estimates. Here we show that, on a national scale, a rise of 1-μg/m 3 in landscape fire PM 2.5 concentrations is positively related to a same-day 0.16% (95% confidence interval: 0.01%–0.32%) increase in hospital admissions for cardiovascular disease, 0.28% (0.12%–0.44%) for ischemic heart disease, and 0.25% (0.02%–0.47%) for ischemic stroke. The associations remain significant even after adjusting for other sources of PM 2.5 . Our findings indicate that transient elevation in landscape fire PM 2.5 levels may increase risk of cardiovascular diseases. There is a lack of studies on the impact of landscape fire PM 2.5 on cardiovascular health. In this nationwide time-series study, short-term exposure to landscape fire PM 2.5 was associated with increased hospital admissions for cardiovascular disease, ischemic heart disease, and ischemic stroke in 184 Chinese cities.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-024-54095-3