4.6 Article

Ambient Temperature, Air Pollution, and Heart Rate Variability in an Aging Population

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
Volume 173, Issue 9, Pages 1013-1021

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/aje/kwq477

Keywords

air pollution; heart rate; interaction; ozone; particulate matter; temperature

Funding

  1. Environmental Protection Agency [R827353, R832416]
  2. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences [RO1-ES015172, ES00002, RO1-ES016932, PO1-ES008925, KO1-ES016587]
  3. Epidemiology Research and Information Center of the US Department of Veterans Affairs
  4. EPA [R832416, 909117] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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Studies show that ambient temperature and air pollution are associated with cardiovascular disease and that they may interact to affect cardiovascular events. However, few epidemiologic studies have examined mechanisms through which ambient temperature may influence cardiovascular function. The authors examined whether temperature was associated with heart rate variability (HRV) in a Boston, Massachusetts, study population and whether such associations were modified by ambient air pollution concentrations. The population was a cohort of 694 older men examined between 2000 and 2008. The authors fitted a mixed model to examine associations between temperature and air pollution and their interactions with repeated HRV measurements, adjusting for covariates selected a priori on the basis of their previous studies. Results showed that higher ambient temperature was associated with decreases in HRV measures (standard deviation of normal-to-normal intervals, low-frequency power, and high-frequency power) during the warm season but not during the cold season. These warm-season associations were significantly greater when ambient ozone levels were higher (>22.3 ppb) but did not differ according to levels of ambient fine (<= 2.5 mu m) particulate matter. The authors conclude that temperature and ozone, exposures to both of which are expected to increase with climate change, might act together to worsen cardiovascular health and/or precipitate cardiovascular events via autonomic nervous system dysfunction.

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