Title Ambient Coarse Particulate Matter and Hospital Admissions for Ischemic Stroke A National Analysis
Authors Tian, Yaohua
Liu, Hui
Xiang, Xiao
Zhao, Zuolin
Juan, Juan
Li, Man
Song, Jing
Cao, Yaying
Wu, Yao
Wang, Xiaowen
Chen, Libo
Wei, Chen
Gao, Pei
Hu, Yonghua
Affiliation Peking Univ, Dept Epidemiol & Biostat, Sch Publ Hlth, 38 Xueyuan Rd, Beijing 100191, Peoples R China
Peking Univ, Med Informat Ctr, Beijing, Peoples R China
Beijing HealthCom Data Technol Co Ltd, Beijing, Peoples R China
Keywords China
hospitals
humidity
ischemic stroke
particulate matter
temperature
Issue Date 2019
Publisher STROKE
Abstract Background and Purpose-Evidence on the effects of coarse particulate matter (PM10-2.5) on ischemic stroke is limited and inconsistent. We evaluated the acute effects of PM10-2.5 exposure on hospital admissions for ischemic stroke in China. Methods-We conducted a national time-series analysis of associations between daily PM10-2.5 concentrations and daily hospital admissions for ischemic stroke in China between January 2014 and December 2016. Hospital admissions for ischemic stroke were identified from the database of Urban Employee Basic Medical Insurance, which contains data from 0.28 billion beneficiaries. We applied a city-specific Poisson regression to examine the associations of PM10-2.5 and daily ischemic stroke admissions. We combined the city-specific effect estimates with a random effects meta-analysis, and further evaluated the exposure-response relationship curve and potential effect modifiers. Results-We identified > 2 million hospital admissions for ischemic stroke in 172 Chinese cities. A 10 mu g/m(3) increase in PM10-2.5 concentrations (lag day 0) was associated with a 0.91% (95% CI, 0.73-1.10) increase in hospital admissions for ischemic stroke. The association remained significant after adjusting for PM2.5 (percentage change, 0.96%; 95% CI, 0.75-1.18). The exposure-response relationship was approximately linear, with a moderate response at lower levels (<200 mu g/m(3)) and a steeper response at higher levels. The association was stronger in cities with lower PM10-2.5 concentrations, higher temperatures, or higher relative humidity. Conclusions-This nationwide study provides robust evidence of the short-term association between exposure to PM10-2.5 and increased hospital admissions for ischemic stroke and supports the hypothesis that the association differs by city characteristics.
URI http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11897/549294
ISSN 0039-2499
DOI 10.1161/STROKEAHA.118.022687
Indexed SCI(E)
Appears in Collections: 公共卫生学院
医学信息中心

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