Ambient particulate air pollution, blood cell parameters, and effect modification by psychosocial stress: Findings from two studies in three major Chinese cities

The associations between particulate matter (PM) exposure, psychosocial stress and blood cell parameters are bringing novel insights to characterize the early damage of multiple diseases. Based on two studies conducted in three Chinses cities using cross-sectional (Beijing, 425 participants) and pan...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental research 2022-07, Vol.210, p.112932-112932, Article 112932
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Wanzhou, Guo, Tongjun, Guo, Huaqi, Chen, Xi, Ma, Yating, Deng, Hongyan, Yu, Hengyi, Chen, Qiao, Li, Hongyu, Liu, Qisijing, Shan, Anqi, Li, Yaoyan, Pang, Bo, Shi, Jiazhang, Wang, Xinmei, Chen, Juan, Deng, Furong, Sun, Zhiwei, Guo, Xinbiao, Wang, Yan, Tang, Naijun, Wu, Shaowei
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The associations between particulate matter (PM) exposure, psychosocial stress and blood cell parameters are bringing novel insights to characterize the early damage of multiple diseases. Based on two studies conducted in three Chinses cities using cross-sectional (Beijing, 425 participants) and panel study (Tianjin and Shanghai, 92 participants with 361 repeated measurements) designs, this study explored the associations between short-term exposure to ambient PM and blood cell parameters, and the effect modification by psychosocial stress. Increasing PM2.5 exposure was significantly associated with decreases in red blood cell (RBC) count and mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration (MCHC), and increases in mean corpuscular volume (MCV), platelets count (PLT) and platelet hematocrit (PCT) in both studies. For instance, a 10 μg/m3 increment in PM2.5 concentration was associated with a 1.04% (95%CI: 0.16%, 1.92%) increase in PLT (4-d) and a 1.09% (95%CI: 0.31%, 1.87%) increase in PCT (4-d) in the cross-sectional study, and a 0.64% (95%CI: 0.06%, 1.22%) increase in PLT (1-d) and a 0.72% (95%CI: 0.33%, 1.11%) increase in PCT (1-d) in the panel study, respectively. In addition, stronger increases in MCV, PLT, and PCT associated with PM2.5 exposure were found in higher psychosocial stress group compared to lower psychosocial stress group (p for interaction
ISSN:0013-9351
1096-0953
DOI:10.1016/j.envres.2022.112932