Por favor, use este identificador para citar o enlazar este ítem: http://repositorio.pediatria.gob.mx:8180/handle/20.500.12103/2417
Título : Exposure to air pollution is associated with lung hyperinflation in healthy children and adolescents inSouthwest Mexico City: a pilot study
Creador: Calderón Garcidueñas, Lilian
Nivel de acceso: Open access
Palabras clave : Contaminantes del aire - efectos adversos
Monitoreo del Ambiente - normas
Exposición por Inhalación - efectos adversos
Enfermedades Pulmonares - inducido químicamente
Enfermedades Pulmonares - fisiopatología
Enfermedades Pulmonares -radiografía
Concentración Máxima Admisible
Ozono - análisis
Proyectos Piloto
Radiografía Torácica 1 Agencia de Protección Ambiental de Estados Unidos 1
Salud Urbana 1
Preescolar 1
Adolescente 1
Mexico
Air Pollutants - adverse effects
Environmental Monitoring - standards -
Inhalation Exposure - adverse effects
Lung Diseases - chemically induced
Lung Diseases - physiopathology
Lung Diseases- radiography
Maximum Allowable Concentration
Ozone - analysis
Pilot Projects
Radiography, Thoracic 1 United States Environmental Protection Agency 1
Urban Health 1
Child, Preschool 1
Adolescent 1
Mexico
Contaminantes del aire
Monitoreo del Ambiente
Enfermedades Pulmonares
ozono
Protección Ambiental
niño
adolescente
Air Pollutants
Environmental Monitoring
Lung Diseases
Ozone
Environmental Protection
child
adolescent
Descripción : Air pollution produces adverse health effects. The consequences of lifelong daily exposures to atmospheric pollutants upon the respiratory apparatus of healthy children are of considerable clinical importance. We investigated the association between exposure to a highly polluted urban environment with a complex mixture of air pollutants-ozone and particulate matter the predominant ones-and chest x-ray abnormalities in 59 healthy Mexican children who are lifelong residents of Southwest Metropolitan Mexico City (SWMMC), with a negative history of tobacco exposure and respiratory illnesses. Their clinical results and x-ray findings were compared to those of 19 Mexican control children, residents of a low-pollution area, with a similar negative history of tobacco exposure and respiratory illnesses. Ozone concentrations in SWMMC exceeded the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (U.S. EPA) National Ambient Air Quality Standard (NAAQS) for O(3): 0.08 ppm as 1-h maximal concentration, not to be exceeded more than 4 times a year, on 71% of days in 1986 and 95% in 1997, with values as high as 0.48 ppm. Ozone maximal peaks are usually recorded between 2 and 5 pm coinciding with children's outdoor physical activities. Children in the control group reported no upper or lower respiratory symptomatology. Every SWMMC child complained of upper and/or lower respiratory symptoms, including epistaxis, nasal dryness and crusting, cough, shortness of breath, and chest discomfort. Children aged 7-13 yr had the most symptomatology, while 5- to 6-year olds and adolescents with the lowest number of statistically significant outdoor exposure hours had less respiratory symptoms. Bilateral symmetric mild lung hyperinflation was significantly associated with exposure to the SWMMC atmosphere (p = .0004). Chronic and sustained inhalation of a complex mixture of air pollutants, including ozone and particulate matter (PM), is associated with lung hyperinflation, suggestive of small airway disease, in a population of clinically healthy children and adolescents. Small airways are a target of air pollutants in SWMMC children, with ozone and PM being most likely responsible, based on experimental animal, controlled-chamber, and epidemiological data available. Our main concern is the potential likelihood for the development of chronic lung disease in this highly exposed population.
Colaborador(es) u otros Autores: Mora Tiscareño A
Chung CJ
Valencia G
Fordham LA
García R
Osnaya N
Romero L
Acuña H
Villarreal Calderón A
Devlin RB
Koren HS
Fecha de publicación : 2000
Tipo de publicación: Artículo
Formato: pdf
Identificador del Recurso : 10.1080/089583700402905
Fuente: Inhal Toxicol 12(6):537-561
URI : http://repositorio.pediatria.gob.mx:8180/handle/20.500.12103/2417
Idioma: eng
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