Objective Air pollution is an important risk factor for cardiovascular diseases throughout the world.Fine particulate matter(PM)air pollution alone is responsible for over three million deaths each year.Large and grow...Objective Air pollution is an important risk factor for cardiovascular diseases throughout the world.Fine particulate matter(PM)air pollution alone is responsible for over three million deaths each year.Large and growing literature has explored whether short-term exposure to fine particulate matter is associated with stroke,but results from prior studies have been inconsistent.To fill this gap,we assessed the evidence quantitatively from epidemiological time-series studies published worldwide and determined whether short-term exposure to fine particulate matter(<2.5μm or<10μm)diameter[PM2.5 and PM10]was associated with increased risk of hospital admission for stroke(including ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke).展开更多
Source apportionment of particulate matters with aerodynamic diameter less than 10 μm (PM10) was conducted in the suburban area of Changsha, China. PM10 samples for 24 h collected with TEOM 1400a and ACCU system in...Source apportionment of particulate matters with aerodynamic diameter less than 10 μm (PM10) was conducted in the suburban area of Changsha, China. PM10 samples for 24 h collected with TEOM 1400a and ACCU system in July and October 2008 were chemically analyzed by the wavelength dispersive X-ray fluorescence (WD-XRF). Source appointment was implemented by the principal component analysis/absolute principal component analysis (PCA/APCA) to identify the possible sources and to quantify the contributions of the sources to PM10. Results show that as the PM10 concentration is increased from (85.6±43.7) μg/m3 in July 2008 to (107.6±35.7) μg/m^3 in October 2008, the concentrations of the anthropogenic elements (P, S, C1, K, Mn, Ni, Cu, Zn, and Pb) are basically increased but concentrations of the natural elements (Na, Mg, Al, Si, Ca, Ti, and Fe) are essentially decreased. Six main sources of PM10 are identified in the suburban of Changsha, China: soil dust, secondary aerosols, domestic oil combustion, waste incineration, traffic emission, and industrial emission contribute 57.7%, 24.0%, 9.8%, 5.0%, 2.0%, and 1.5%, respectively. Soil dust and secondary aerosols are the two major sources of particulate air pollution in suburban area of Changsha, China, so effective measures should be taken to control these two particulate pollutants.展开更多
文摘Objective Air pollution is an important risk factor for cardiovascular diseases throughout the world.Fine particulate matter(PM)air pollution alone is responsible for over three million deaths each year.Large and growing literature has explored whether short-term exposure to fine particulate matter is associated with stroke,but results from prior studies have been inconsistent.To fill this gap,we assessed the evidence quantitatively from epidemiological time-series studies published worldwide and determined whether short-term exposure to fine particulate matter(<2.5μm or<10μm)diameter[PM2.5 and PM10]was associated with increased risk of hospital admission for stroke(including ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke).
基金Project (FANEDD 200545) supported by the Foundation for the Author of National Excellent Doctoral Dissertation of China Project (50408019) supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China Project (2008BAJ12B03) supported by National Key Project of Scientific and Technical Supporting Programs of China
文摘Source apportionment of particulate matters with aerodynamic diameter less than 10 μm (PM10) was conducted in the suburban area of Changsha, China. PM10 samples for 24 h collected with TEOM 1400a and ACCU system in July and October 2008 were chemically analyzed by the wavelength dispersive X-ray fluorescence (WD-XRF). Source appointment was implemented by the principal component analysis/absolute principal component analysis (PCA/APCA) to identify the possible sources and to quantify the contributions of the sources to PM10. Results show that as the PM10 concentration is increased from (85.6±43.7) μg/m3 in July 2008 to (107.6±35.7) μg/m^3 in October 2008, the concentrations of the anthropogenic elements (P, S, C1, K, Mn, Ni, Cu, Zn, and Pb) are basically increased but concentrations of the natural elements (Na, Mg, Al, Si, Ca, Ti, and Fe) are essentially decreased. Six main sources of PM10 are identified in the suburban of Changsha, China: soil dust, secondary aerosols, domestic oil combustion, waste incineration, traffic emission, and industrial emission contribute 57.7%, 24.0%, 9.8%, 5.0%, 2.0%, and 1.5%, respectively. Soil dust and secondary aerosols are the two major sources of particulate air pollution in suburban area of Changsha, China, so effective measures should be taken to control these two particulate pollutants.