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Journal Article

Citation

Tian L, Qiu H, Pun VC, Lin H, Ge E, Chan JC, Louie PK, Ho KF, Yu IT. Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. 2013; 188(10): 1240-1245.

Affiliation

School of Public Health and Primary Care, The CHinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin, Hong Kong ; linweit@cuhk.edu.hk.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2013, American Thoracic Society)

DOI

10.1164/rccm.201304-0676OC

PMID

23944864

Abstract

Rationale: Recent experimental and clinical studies suggest that exogenous carbon monoxide (CO) at lower concentrations may have beneficial effects under certain circumstances whereas population-based epidemiological studies of environmentally relevant CO exposure generated mixed findings. OBJECTIVES: To examine the acute effects of ambient CO on respiratory tract infection (RTI) hospitalizations. METHODS: A time series study was conducted. Daily emergency hospital admission and air pollution data in Hong Kong were collected from January 2001 to December 2007. Log-linear Poisson models were used to estimate the associations between daily hospital admissions for RTI and daily average concentrations of CO across three background air monitoring stations and three roadside stations, respectively, controlling for other traffic related co-pollutants. Measurements and Main RESULTS: CO concentrations were low during the study period with a daily average of 0.6 ppm in background stations and 1.0 ppm in roadside stations. Negative associations were found between ambient CO concentrations and daily hospital admissions for RTI. One ppm increase in background CO at lag 0 to 2 days was associated with -5.7% (95% CI, -9.2 to -2.1) change in RTI admissions from the whole population according to single-pollutant model; the negative association became stronger when NO2 or PM10 was adjusted for in two-pollutant models. The negative association appeared to be stronger in the adults than in the children and elderly. CONCLUSION: Short-term exposure to ambient CO was associated with decreased risk of hospital admissions for RTI, suggesting some acute protective effects of low ambient CO exposure on respiratory infection.


Language: en

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