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1.
Environ Res ; 214(Pt 1): 113738, 2022 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35772504

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: There is currently a scarcity of air pollution epidemiologic data from low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) due to the lack of air quality monitoring in these countries. Additionally, there is limited capacity to assess the health effects of wildfire smoke events in wildfire-prone regions like Brazil's Amazon Basin. Emerging low-cost air quality sensors may have the potential to address these gaps. OBJECTIVES: We investigated the potential of PurpleAir PM2.5 sensors for conducting air pollution epidemiologic research leveraging the United States Environmental Protection Agency's United States-wide correction formula for ambient PM2.5. METHODS: We obtained raw (uncorrected) PM2.5 concentration and humidity data from a PurpleAir sensor in Rio Branco, Brazil, between 2018 and 2019. Humidity measurements from the PurpleAir sensor were used to correct the PM2.5 concentrations. We established the relationship between ambient PM2.5 (corrected and uncorrected) and daily all-cause respiratory hospitalization in Rio Branco, Brazil, using generalized additive models (GAM) and distributed lag non-linear models (DLNM). We used linear regression to assess the relationship between daily PM2.5 concentrations and wildfire reports in Rio Branco during the wildfire seasons of 2018 and 2019. RESULTS: We observed increases in daily respiratory hospitalizations of 5.4% (95%CI: 0.8%, 10.1%) for a 2-day lag and 5.8% (1.5%, 10.2%) for 3-day lag, per 10 µg/m3 PM2.5 (corrected values). The effect estimates were attenuated when the uncorrected PM2.5 data was used. The number of reported wildfires explained 10% of daily PM2.5 concentrations during the wildfire season. DISCUSSION: Exposure-response relationships estimated using corrected low-cost air quality sensor data were comparable with relationships estimated using a validated air quality modeling approach. This suggests that correcting low-cost PM2.5 sensor data may mitigate bias attenuation in air pollution epidemiologic studies. Low-cost sensor PM2.5 data could also predict the air quality impacts of wildfires in Brazil's Amazon Basin.


Assuntos
Poluentes Atmosféricos , Poluição do Ar , Brasil , Estudos Epidemiológicos , Hospitalização , Humanos , Material Particulado , Estados Unidos
2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(6)2022 02 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35121663

RESUMO

Predicting and disrupting transmission of human parasites from wildlife hosts or vectors remains challenging because ecological interactions can influence their epidemiological traits. Human schistosomes, parasitic flatworms that cycle between freshwater snails and humans, typify this challenge. Human exposure risk, given water contact, is driven by the production of free-living cercariae by snail populations. Conventional epidemiological models and management focus on the density of infected snails under the assumption that all snails are equally infectious. However, individual-level experiments contradict this assumption, showing increased production of schistosome cercariae with greater access to food resources. We built bioenergetics theory to predict how resource competition among snails drives the temporal dynamics of transmission potential to humans and tested these predictions with experimental epidemics and demonstrated consistency with field observations. This resource-explicit approach predicted an intense pulse of transmission potential when snail populations grow from low densities, i.e., when per capita access to resources is greatest, due to the resource-dependence of cercarial production. The experiment confirmed this prediction, identifying a strong effect of infected host size and the biomass of competitors on per capita cercarial production. A field survey of 109 waterbodies also found that per capita cercarial production decreased as competitor biomass increased. Further quantification of snail densities, sizes, cercarial production, and resources in diverse transmission sites is needed to assess the epidemiological importance of resource competition and support snail-based disruption of schistosome transmission. More broadly, this work illustrates how resource competition can sever the correspondence between infectious host density and transmission potential.


Assuntos
Biomphalaria/parasitologia , Interações Hospedeiro-Parasita/fisiologia , Schistosoma mansoni/patogenicidade , Esquistossomose mansoni/parasitologia , Caramujos/parasitologia , Animais , Humanos
3.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33924663

RESUMO

The agricultural crop sector in the United States depends on migrant, seasonal, and immigrant farmworkers. As an ethnic minority group in the U.S. with little access to health care and a high level of poverty, farmworkers face a combination of adverse living and workplace conditions, such as exposure to high levels of air pollution, that can place them at a higher risk for adverse health outcomes including respiratory infections. This narrative review summarizes peer-reviewed original epidemiology research articles (2000-2020) focused on respirable dust exposures in the workplace and respiratory illnesses among farmworkers. We found studies (n = 12) that assessed both air pollution and respiratory illnesses in farmworkers. Results showed that various air pollutants and respiratory illnesses have been assessed using appropriate methods (e.g., personal filter samplers and spirometry) and a consistent pattern of increased respiratory illness in relation to agricultural dust exposure. There were several gaps in the literature; most notably, no study coupled occupational air exposure and respiratory infection among migrant, seasonal and immigrant farmworkers in the United States. This review provides an important update to the literature regarding recent epidemiological findings on the links between occupational air pollution exposures and respiratory health among vulnerable farmworker populations.


Assuntos
Poluição do Ar , Exposição Ocupacional , Saúde Ocupacional , Migrantes , Poluição do Ar/efeitos adversos , Etnicidade , Fazendeiros , Humanos , Grupos Minoritários , Exposição Ocupacional/análise , Estados Unidos/epidemiologia
4.
Kidney Blood Press Res ; 35(4): 273-80, 2012.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22378379

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Sildenafil treatment ameliorates progressive renal injury resulting from extensive renal ablation; however, modifications induced by sildenafil in the glomerular hemodynamic pathophysiology of the remnant kidney have not been investigated. AIM: To determine the effects of sildenafil in the glomerular microcirculation and their relation to histological damage in the renal ablation model. METHODS: Micropuncture studies were performed 60 days after 5/6 nephrectomy in rats that received no treatment, sildenafil (5 mg/kg/day) and reserpine, hydralazine and hydrochlorothiazide to maintain the blood pressure within normal levels. Sham-operated rats untreated and treated with sildenafil served as controls. RESULTS: As expected, renal ablation induced systemic and glomerular hypertension, hyperfiltration, proteinuria, glomerulosclerosis and tubulointerstitial inflammatory damage in the remnant kidney. Sildenafil treatment prevented single-nephron hyperfiltration and hypertension, suppressed renal arteriolar remodeling, ameliorated systemic hypertension and proteinuria, increased urinary excretion of cGMP and NO(2)(-)/NO(3)(-), decreased oxidative stress and improved histological damage in the remnant kidney. Normalization blood pressure with reserpine, hydralazine and hydrochlorothiazide did not modify glomerular hemodynamics, proteinuria or histological changes induced by renal ablation. CONCLUSIONS: Beneficial effects of sildenafil in the remnant kidney are associated with a reduction in the arteriolar remodeling, renal inflammatory changes and prevention of changes in the glomerular microcirculation.


Assuntos
Hipertensão/prevenção & controle , Hipertensão/cirurgia , Glomérulos Renais/efeitos dos fármacos , Glomérulos Renais/cirurgia , Nefrectomia , Piperazinas/uso terapêutico , Sulfonas/uso terapêutico , Animais , Hipertensão/patologia , Glomérulos Renais/patologia , Masculino , Piperazinas/farmacologia , Purinas/farmacologia , Purinas/uso terapêutico , Ratos , Ratos Wistar , Citrato de Sildenafila , Sulfonas/farmacologia , Resultado do Tratamento , Vasodilatadores/farmacologia , Vasodilatadores/uso terapêutico
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