Health & Environmental Research Online (HERO)


Print Feedback Export to File
3861896 
Journal Article 
The acute effects of fine particulate matter constituents on blood inflammation and coagulation 
Liu, C; Cai, J; Qiao, L; Wang, H; Xu, W; Li, H; Zhao, Z; Chen, R; Kan, H 
2017 
Environmental Science & Technology
ISSN: 0013-936X
EISSN: 1520-5851 
51 
14 
8128-8137 
English 
Limited evidence is available on the effects of various fine particulate matter (PM2.5) constituents on blood inflammation and coagulation. We examined the associations between 10 constituents and 10 circulating biomarkers in a panel of 28 urban residents with four repeated measurements in Shanghai, China. Based on the linear mixed-effect models, we fitted the single-constituent models, the constituent-PM2.5 joint models, and the constituent-residual models to evaluate the associations between PM2.5 constituents and eight inflammatory biomarkers (fibrinogen, C-reactive protein, monocyte chemoattractant protein-1, tumor necrosis factor-α, interleukin-1b, intercellular adhesion molecule-1, P-selectin, vascular cell adhesion molecule-1) and two coagulation biomarkers (plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 and soluble CD40 ligand). We found robust associations of organic carbon (OC), elemental carbon (EC), nitrate (NO3(-)), and ammonium (NH4(+)) with at least 1 of 8 inflammatory markers. On average, an interquartile range increase in the four constituents corresponded to increments of 50%, 37%, 25%, and 26% in inflammatory biomarkers, respectively. Only sulfate (SO4(2-)) or NH4(+) was robustly associated with coagulation markers (corresponding increments: 23% and 20%). Our results provided evidence that some constituents in PM2.5 (OC, EC, NO3(-), SO4(2-), and NH4(+)) might play crucial roles in inducing systematic inflammation and coagulation, but their roles varied by the selected biomarkers. 
• Nitrate/Nitrite
     Broad LitSearch 2016/1/1 - 2017/12/5
          Refs found by LitSearch but not ATSDR/IARC
          PubMed
          WoS
     Refs found only by 2017 LitSearch or Citation Mapping
     Ref Types 12/2017
          All Others
     LitSearch Update 2016-2017
          PubMed
          WoS
• LitSearch-NOx (2024)
     Forward Citation Search
          Epidemiology
               Results
                    Cardiovascular-ST
                         PubMed
                         WoS
          Exposure
               Results
                    Interventions
                         PubMed
                    Confounding
                         PubMed
                         WoS
     Keyword Search
          Epidemiology
               Respiratory
                    WoS
               Cardiovascular
                    WoS
               Cancer
                    WoS
               Other Health Effects
                    WoS
          Exposure
               Confounding
                    WoS
                    PubMed
          Toxicology
               Cancer
                    WoS
                    PubMed
     TIAB Screening
          Epidemiology
               Include
                    Cardiovascular
• Litsearch – PM ISA Supplement 2021
     Pubmed iCite citation search (April 2021 BR)
          PM2.5 Cardiovascular and Mortality Epi Search
               Results
          Merged search results (location and date exclusion applied)