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89800 
Journal Article 
Air pollution and lung function among susceptible adult subjects: A panel study 
Lagorio, S; Forastiere, F; Pistelli, R; Iavarone, I; Michelozzi, P; Fano, V; Marconi, A; Ziemacki, G; Ostro, BD 
2006 
Yes 
Environmental Health: A Global Access Science Source
ISSN: 1476-069X 
11 
English 
BACKGROUND: Adverse health effects at relatively low levels of ambient air pollution have consistently been reported in the last years. We conducted a time-series panel study of subjects with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), asthma, and ischemic heart disease (IHD) to evaluate whether daily levels of air pollutants have a measurable impact on the lung function of adult subjects with pre-existing lung or heart diseases.

METHODS: Twenty-nine patients with COPD, asthma, or IHD underwent repeated lung function tests by supervised spirometry in two one-month surveys. Daily samples of coarse (PM10-2.5) and fine (PM2.5) particulate matter were collected by means of dichotomous samplers, and the dust was gravimetrically analyzed. The particulate content of selected metals (cadmium, chrome, iron, nickel, lead, platinum, vanadium, and zinc) was determined by atomic absorption spectrometry. Ambient concentrations of nitrogen dioxide (NO2), carbon monoxide (CO), ozone (O3), and sulphur dioxide (SO2) were obtained from the regional air-quality monitoring network. The relationships between concentrations of air pollutants and lung function parameters were analyzed by generalized estimating equations (GEE) for panel data.

RESULTS: Decrements in lung function indices (FVC and/or FEV1) associated with increasing concentrations of PM2.5, NO2 and some metals (especially zinc and iron) were observed in COPD cases. Among the asthmatics, NO2 was associated with a decrease in FEV1. No association between average ambient concentrations of any air pollutant and lung function was observed among IHD cases.

CONCLUSION: This study suggests that the short-term negative impact of exposure to air pollutants on respiratory volume and flow is limited to individuals with already impaired respiratory function. The fine fraction of ambient PM seems responsible for the observed effects among COPD cases, with zinc and iron having a potential role via oxidative stress. The respiratory function of the relatively young and mild asthmatics included in this study seems to worsen when ambient levels of NO2 increase. 
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• Vanadium Compounds - Problem Formulation
     Manual review of existing IRIS and PPRTV assessments
          IRIS 2011/2014
     Combined data set
          Dataset for title/abstract screening
               Supplemental (TIAB)
     Supplemental material
          Non-oral route of administration
          Mixture studies
     From 2011 V2O5 IRIS assessment
• Vanadium Pentoxide (Draft, 2011)
NAAQS
• ISA-CO (2010 Final Project Page)
     2010 Final
• ISA-Lead (2013 Final Project Page)
     Considered
     Atmospheric and Exposure Sciencies
• ISA-NOx
     Cited
          1st Draft
               Controlled Human Exposure
               Epidemiology
          2nd Draft
          Final
          Final Cited
     2008 Final
• ISA-Ozone (2013 Final Project Page)
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          1st Draft
          2nd Draft
          3rd Draft
          Final
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     References from CASAC/Public Comments
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     2009 Final
• ISA-PM (2019)
     Peer Input Draft
          Chapter 6
          Chapter 7