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Query: UMLS:C0149514 (
bronchitis
)
6,902
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The Harvard Air Pollution Health Study has been a ten year prospective study of respiratory symptoms and pulmonary function of children and adults living in six U.S. communities. Indices of acute and chronic effects of air pollution exposures have been studied. Evidence is presented for adverse effects of ambient and indoor air pollution on children. Relationships between ambient
TSP
concentrations and hospital emergency room admissions, temporary decreases in pulmonary functions and prevalence of community
bronchitis
all indicate a slight adverse effect. Refinements of these relationships will occur when fine fraction and acid sulfate aerosol concentrations are incorporated into the health analysis. Exposures to cigarette smoke at home are associated with increased reported respiratory symptoms in children. There is a negative relationship between maternal smoking and age and sex adjusted height for children. Results from indoor and personal exposure studies have lead to the design of an acute symptoms and indoor air pollution study. Between 1985 and 1988 1800 children will be tracked for a year while respirable particles, nitrogen dioxide, water vapor and air exchange will be measured in their homes. Using continuous sulfate/sulfuric acid monitors built at Harvard, we are characterizing the magnitude, duration and frequency of acid aerosol events in each of our study cities. This information will be utilized in the analysis of the respiratory symptom data. The Harvard Air Pollution Health Study is providing information on the relationship among health variables and air pollutant exposures. In addition, this study will add to our understanding of lung growth and aging and the risk factors associated with chronic respiratory disabilities.
...
PMID:Harvard Air Pollution Health Study in six cites in the U.S.A. 383 6
We excepted from the logs of the adult and children's emergency room at Soroka Hospital Medical Center the number and types of services requested by day for the year 1980. Both total visits and visits for respiratory conditions were examined in order to test whether rain, heat, or pollutants led to increased requests for emergency room care. The total visits for adults were 72,375, of which 1,727 (2.4%) were for selected respiratory conditions. The total visits for children were 19,232, and respiratory conditions were 3,980 (20.7%). There is marked seasonal excess for respiratory visits for children in winter, and a lesser excess for adult respiratory conditions. Non-respiratory conditions and overall visits are higher in summer months. Fewer visits occur on Saturday and on Friday, with the maximum on Sunday. Otitis and
bronchitis
among children show little day-of-week trends. "High event" days for admissions are determined by fitting a Poisson distribution to the numbers of admissions by day for various respiratory complaints, and we then examine the concordance between these high event days and days with rain, high pollution or temperature. Adult respiratory conditions were more likely to occur on days with high total particulates (
TSP
) and "respirable" particulates (RSP). When the mean values of RSP and
TSP
for high asthma and shortness of breath days were compared with a random day for the same month, significant differences were found for RSP for adults, but not for
TSP
. Natural dust is the more likely cause of this association. Emergency room monitoring should be useful in locations with high levels of man-made pollutants.
...
PMID:Monitoring of hospital emergency room visits as a method for detecting health effects of environmental exposures. 671 Jan 28
Particles with diameters ranging from less than 0.02 to more than 100 microns and in concentration up to 120 micrograms/m3 daily average
TSP
(total suspended particles) are measurable in the air of Swiss cities and responsible for the decrease of visibility on the Swiss Plateau and south of the Alps. The particle size shows a typical distribution: the coarse particles (> 2.5 microns mass median diameter) are mostly of natural origin (plants, pollen, earth particles) and are deposited in the upper airways. The fine particles (PM2.5 < 2.5 microns) are predominantly deposited into the alveolar space. These fine and ultrafine particles (< 0.02 microns) are produced by the burning of fossil fuels or by photochemical reactions. By bypassing the mucociliary and cellular defense mechanisms, fine particles can invade the lung parenchyma and cause an inflammatory response. The additional chemical layering of a carbon core by nitrates, sulfates and other organic materials and metals such as iron cause greater local oxidative and/or carcinogenic damage than in the vaporized state. In comparing worldwide epidemiological studies, there seems to be a cohesive and consistent relationship between increases of particle concentration and the increase of mortality (mostly among patients over 65 with concomitant lung and heart diseases and among smokers) and morbidity (
bronchitis
, pneumonia, COPD, and, less convincingly, asthma). An increase in daily average PM10 (particles < 10 microns) is correlated with an increase in mortality not related to accidents and suicides of 1.0% for the same and/or the following days. In Switzerland, mean annual concentrations of 14-53 micrograms/m3
TSP
or 10-33 micrograms/m3 PM10, well below the national standard (annual mean
TSP
70 micrograms/m3) have been measured in rural and urban areas. Even at these concentrations an increase in respiratory symptoms and a decrease in lung function, without evidence for a "safe" threshold, have been observed in the Swiss study of air pollution and lung diseases in adults (SAPALDIA). Although the noxious effects of the particles cannot be clearly separated from the effect of other pollutants (e.g. NOx, SO2, ozone) in complex pollutant mixtures, the emission standards and national standards for ambient air should be revised, in particular by adding a standard for fine particles (e.g. PM10 or PM2.5).
...
PMID:[Are inhaled dust particles harmful for our lungs?]. 900 26
The general morbidity is being influenced to a great extent by diseases of the respiratory tract. Since their incidence and prevalence have been increasing, the identification of causal factors, especially of environmental origin, is of importance, not just in view of implementing preventive control strategies. Primary irritative gaseous [like sulfur dioxide (SO2)] as well as particulate pollutants (like
TSP
) can be regarded as causal constituents. Using the opportunity of changing levels of ambient air pollution in East Germany since 1989, the impact of SO2 and
TSP
on
bronchitis
was investigated over the last 10 years as part of several intervention studies in a locally defined homogenous population, children. The data suggest a significant association between SO2 and the prevalence of
bronchitis
in children but not for
TSP
. Considering the findings of other studies with respect to air pollution and the epidemiology of adverse health effects (especially respiratory disease), these results would amend the hypothesis put forward in a review of the literature as
TSP
< ultrafine particles (SO4(2-)) = SO2. Although these data show a significant association with only SO2, this does not imply that ultrafine particles, such as SO4(2-), do not contribute to the association with the observed adverse health effects. Nevertheless, the findings suggest that
TSP
seems less likely to be a predictor in the association with respiratory diseases, particularly not in the presence of high SO2.
...
PMID:Effect of sulfur dioxide and particulate pollutants on bronchitis in children--a risk analysis. 1140 99
Human T-lymphotropic virus type II (HTLV-II) is a human retrovirus which is endemic in Amerindian and pygmy tribes. Molecular subtypes show geographic segregation consistent with an ancient origin of this virus within humans in Africa or South America. More recently, injection drug users in the United States and Europe have become infected with HTLV-II, and secondary sexual transmission has introduced the virus at low levels into the general population and blood donors. HTLV-II has been linked with a spastic paraparesis called HTLV-associated myelopathy / tropical spastic paraparesis (HAM/
TSP
), and perhaps with other neurological syndromes. It is also associated with an increased incidence of pneumonia and
bronchitis
, inflammatory conditions such as arthritis, and perhaps with increased mortality. Except for a few cases of cutaneous lymphoma in patients coinfected with HIV, there is no evidence that HTLV-II causes lymphoproliferative disease. HTLV-II and HIV coinfection has not been proven to alter the course of HIV disease, but such patients may have altered levels of CD4+ and CD8+ lymphocytes, and antiretroviral therapy may paradoxically increase HTLV-II proviral load.
...
PMID:The epidemiology and disease outcomes of human T-lymphotropic virus type II. 1559 31