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Journal ArticleDOI

Health effects of air pollution due to coal combustion in the Chestnut Ridge Region of Pennsylvania: results of cross-sectional analysis in adults.

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TLDR
It is suggested that wheezing may be associated with ambient exposure to sulfur dioxide in nonsmokers, but no effect of sulfur dioxide on cigarette smokers was observed.
Abstract
Respiratory questionnaires (ATS-DLD-78) were administered to 5557 adult women in a rural area of Western Pennsylvania to evaluate the health effects of air pollution resulting from coal combustion. Air pollution data were derived from 17 air quality monitor sites and stratified to define low, medium, and high pollution areas. The means of 4 yr (1975-1978) annual averages for sulfur dioxide in each strata were 62, 66, and 99 micrograms/m3, respectively. Total suspended particulates were not tested as a risk factor because they reflected air pollution from sources other than coal combustion (e.g., agricultural, road dusts). Risks of respiratory symptoms were evaluated in a multiple logistic model that adjusted for several potential confounding factors. The risk of "wheeze most days or nights" in nonsmokers residing in the high and medium pollution areas was 1.58 and 1.26 (P = .02), respectively, relative to residents in the low pollution area. In the subset of residents who had lived in the same location for at least 5 yr, relative risks increased to 1.95 and 1.40 (P less than .01), respectively. An increased risk of grade 3 dyspnea in nonsmokers was associated with sulfur dioxide but did not achieve statistical significance (P = .11), and there was no association of cough or phlegm and air pollution in nonsmokers. Cigarette smoking characteristics were the major determinant of respiratory symptoms in smokers, and no independent association of air pollution was found. This study suggests that wheezing may be associated with ambient exposure to sulfur dioxide in nonsmokers, but no effect of sulfur dioxide on cigarette smokers was observed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Outdoor Air Pollution: Nitrogen Dioxide, Sulfur Dioxide, and Carbon Monoxide Health Effects

TL;DR: A number of studies examining the effects of ambient level exposure to NO2, SO2, and CO have failed to find associations with adverse health outcomes and have not demonstrated a clear dose-dependent health risk response to increasing amounts of these pollutants except at high concentrations.
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Long-Term Ambient Air Pollution and Respiratory Symptoms in Adults (SAPALDIA Study)

TL;DR: It is found that long-term exposure to air pollution of rather low levels is associated with higher prevalences of respiratory symptoms in adults and the observed associations remained stable when further control was applied for environmental tobacco smoke exposure, past and current occupational exposures, atopy, and early childhood respiratory infections.
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Ambient air pollution and chronic respiratory morbidity in Delhi.

TL;DR: In the comparison of nonsmoking residents of lower- and higher-pollution zones—stratified according to socioeconomic levels and sex—chronic cough, chronic phlegm, and dyspnea were significantly more common in the higher- Pollution zone in only some of the strata, while lung function of asymptomatic nonsmokers was consistently and significantly better among both male and female residents of the lower- pollution zone.
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Studies of acid aerosols in six cities and in a new multi-city investigation: design issues.

TL;DR: Estimating chronic exposure from the year-long measurement of acid aerosols and consideration of specific criteria for selecting communities to study hope to minimize potential confounding to allow us to assess the chronic impact of strong acid in the atmosphere on the respiratory health of these children.
Journal ArticleDOI

Association of Indoor and Outdoor Particulate Level with Chronic Respiratory Illness

TL;DR: There was an excess risk of all respiratory symptoms among subjects residing in industrial and residential areas, with an increase in symptom prevalence with outdoor particulate levels.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Assessment of the health effects of atmospheric sulfur oxides and particulate matter: evidence from observational studies.

TL;DR: The currently available epidemiologic evidence from population studies of the health effects of atmospheric sulfur oxides and particulate matter is examined to approximate the exposure-response relationship linking pollutant concentrations with mortality and morbidity levels.
Journal ArticleDOI

Smoking, air pollution, and bronchitis in britain

TL;DR: The frequency of more serious bronchitis increases most steeply with age among smokers in the more polluted districts, and urban/rural gradients are not explained by smoking differences alone.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of cigarette tar content and smoking habits on respiratory symptoms in women.

TL;DR: Among current smokers, the number of cigarettes smoked per day was consistently the strongest risk factor for chronic cough, chronic phlegm, wheeze, and dyspnea and ex-smokers showed risks between those of current and never smokers.
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