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Can Timing of Exposure Predispose Older Adults to Disease?

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Leap, Scientific American; 1973. Brain Weight (92%) Nerve Conduction Velocity (90 ... Increased risk of VA with 2-day mean PM2.5, Black Carbon, CO and NO2 for ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Can Timing of Exposure Predispose Older Adults to Disease?


1
Can Timing of Exposure Predispose Older Adults to
Disease?
  • Douglas W. Dockery
  • Effects of Air Pollution on Health of Older
    Adults
  • June 14-15, 2005
  • Mickey Leland National Urban Air Toxics Research
    Center

2
Loss of Function with Age
Brain Weight (92)
Nerve Conduction Velocity (90)
Basal Metabolism (84)
Cardiac Output (70)
Kidney Filtration Rate (69)
Maximum Breathing Capacity (43)
Leap, Scientific American 1973
3
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4
And so from hour to hour We ripe and ripe,And
from hour to hourWe rot and rot.
  • Shakespeare
  • As You like It

5
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6
Just as a twig is bent the tree inclines.
  • Alexander Pope
  • Moral Essays

7
Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease
  • Cumulative loss of function (FEV1) from
    environmental insults during adulthood
  • Maximum attained function determined by growth
    (development) during childhood
  • Cumulative effects of environmental insults on
    growth retardation
  • Early childhood effects during lung development
  • Pre-natal or genetic factors define track (growth
    curve)

8
Six Cities Mortality Study
  • 8111 adults followed up from 1974 to 1989
  • Mortality risk ratios
  • Adjustment
  • Age, Sex
  • Cigarette Smoking
  • Occupational Exposure, Education
  • Body Mass Index
  • Chronic Disease
  • Compared to city-specific average PM2.5 (1979-86)

9
Six Cities Cohort Mortality
Steubenville
Kingston
St. Louis
Topeka
Watertown
Portage
10
Six Cities Mortality Follow-up
  • 1974 to 1989 follow-up
  • Annual returned postcards and National Death
    Index
  • 1,364 deaths in 104,243 person years
  • PM2.5 measurements 1979-1986
  • 1990 to 1998 follow-up
  • National Death Index search
  • 1,368 deaths in 54,735 person years
  • PM2.5 estimated from PM10 1990-1998

11
Six Cities Cohort Follow-up
Steubenville
Kingston
St. Louis
Topeka
Portage
Watertown
12
Dublin Coal Ban
  • Sept 1, 1990marketing, sale, and distribution of
    bituminous coals banned within city of Dublin.
  • Effect was an immediate and permanent reduction
    in average particulate concentrations.
  • Average black smoke concentrations declined by
    35.6 mg/m3 (70) after the ban on coal sales.

13
Dublin Coal Ban
  • Total (non-trauma) death rates decreased by 57
    (plt00001)
  • Cardiovascular deaths by 103 (plt00001)
  • Respiratory deaths by 155 (plt00001)
  • Effects seen within the same season

Clancy et al, Lancet, 2002
14
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15
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16
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17
Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease
  • Cumulative loss of function (FEV1) from
    environmental insults during adulthood
  • Maximum attained function determined by growth
    (development) during childhood
  • Cumulative effects of environmental insults on
    growth retardation
  • Early childhood effects during lung development
  • Pre-natal or genetic factors define track (growth
    curve)
  • Death more likely from acute events
  • Pneumonia
  • Acute cardiac event

18
Coronary Heart Disease
  • Atherosclerosis
  • Plaque builds up in arteries over time
  • Can signficantly reduce blood flow
  • Carotid intima-media thickness (CIMT)
  • Ultrasound measure of atherosclerosis in carotid
    artery
  • Correlates well with coronary artery
    atherosclerosis
  • Associated with age and sex
  • Associated with long-term exposures to smoking
    and passive smoking

? Men ? Women
19
IMT by age in patients with heterozygous familial
hypercholesterolaemia (FH) and low-risk controls.
Each dot represents the average IMT of 10 carotid
and femoral IMTs of a subject. Kastelein et
al,Atherosclerosis Suppl 4 2003 31-6
20
Ambient Air Pollution and Atherosclerosis in Los
Angeles Kuenzli et al, EHP 2005
  • 798 participants in 2 clinical trials
  • Carotid intima-media thickness (CIMT) subclinical
    atherosclerosis.
  • Geocoded resident to assign annual mean PM2.5.
  • 10 mg/m3 increase in mean PM2.5
  • associated with 5.9 (p0.018) increase in CIMT
  • Stronger associations in Women and Older subjects

21
Linkage of Atheroschlerotic Plaques and Acute
Myocardial Infarction
22
Determinants of MI Onset StudyPeters et al,
Circulation 2001
  • 833 patients with confirmed myocardial infarction
    interviewed in the greater Boston area between
    1995 and 1996.
  • Hourly PM2.5 data available during this period
    (24h-average 12.1 µg/m3 max 47.4 µg/m3).

23
PM2.5 and Onset of Myocardial Infarction
24
Coronary Heart Disease
  • Cumulative build-up of plague in coronary
    arteries during adulthood
  • CIMT associatd with long term environmental
    exposures (active and passive smoking, air
    pollution)
  • Developing evidence that plague buildup begins in
    childhood
  • Pre-natal or genetic factors may define track
    (growth curve)
  • Death more likely from acute events
  • Plaque rupture, myocardial infarction, ischemic
    stroke

25
Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillators (ICD)
Devices
  • Implanted under skin with electrodes and leads
    attached to heart
  • Monitor cardiac rhythm abnormalities
  • On detecting potentially fatal arrhythmia,
    triggers cardioverter shock
  • Records date and time of all detected arrhythmias
    and therapies

26
Air Pollution and Incidence of Cardiac
ArrhythmiasDockery et al, EHP June 2005
  • 203 patients with Implanted Cardioverter
    Defibrillators (ICDs)
  • Lived within I-495 in eastern Massachusetts
  • Followed 1995-2002, average 3.2 years
  • Abstracted ICD detected ventricular arrhythmias
  • Confirmed by cardiac electrophysiologist
  • Daily air pollution measurements
  • PM2.5, Black Carbon, SO4
  • CO, O3, NO2 and SO2
  • Weather
  • Temperature and humidity
  • Regression of cardiac arrhythmias against air
    pollution

27
Air Pollution and Incidence of Cardiac
Arrhythmias Dockery et al, EHP June 2005
  • ICD detected ventricular arrhythmias (VA) in 203
    patients in Boston
  • Increased risk of VA with 2-day mean PM2.5, Black
    Carbon, CO and NO2 for patients with a recent,
    previous arrhythmia
  • Air pollution is acute trigger of potentially
    life-thratening VA among patients with
    electrically unstable cardiac substrate

Prior VA
No Prior VA
28
Environmental Effects on the Elderly
  • Compromised Substrate
  • Cumulative loss of function in adults
  • Compromise begins during childhood
  • Prenatal (genes) define growth curve (track)
  • Acute Trigger
  • Environmental exposures can also trigger acute
    response
  • With compromised substrate (inadequate reserve),
    pushed over edge

29
Timing of Air Pollution Exposures
  • Acute exposures (hours to days) can trigger
    adverse events, particularly in the presence of
    compromised substrate
  • Medium term exposures (weeks to months) also can
    trigger adverse events
  • Long-term exposures (years to decades) can
    contribute to compormised substrate or loss of
    physiologic reserve
  • Early life exposures (perinatal and childhood)
    can define track for development of chronic
    condidtions
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