2021
Exposure to Primary Air Pollutants Generated by Highway Traffic and Daily Mortality Risk in Near-Road Communities: A Case-Crossover Study
Filigrana P, Milando C, Batterman S, Levy J, Mukherjee B, Pedde M, Szpiro A, Adar S. Exposure to Primary Air Pollutants Generated by Highway Traffic and Daily Mortality Risk in Near-Road Communities: A Case-Crossover Study. American Journal Of Epidemiology 2021, 191: 63-74. PMID: 34347034, DOI: 10.1093/aje/kwab215.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsNear-road populationsAir pollutionMortality riskExposure to traffic-related air pollutionAverage PM2.5 exposureTraffic-generated air pollutionNear-road communitiesResearch LINE sourceConcentrations of PM2.5Traffic-related air pollutionCase-crossover designPrimary air pollutantsConditional logistic regressionPuget Sound area of Washington StateDaily mortality riskCase-crossoverTime-varying covariatesCerebrovascular mortalityPM2.5 exposurePrimary pollutantsQuantify associationsAerodynamic diameterShorter averaging periodsPM2.5Pollution
2014
The characteristics of coarse particulate matter air pollution associated with alterations in blood pressure and heart rate during controlled exposures
Morishita M, Bard R, Wang L, Das R, Dvonch J, Spino C, Mukherjee B, Sun Q, Harkema J, Rajagopalan S, Brook R. The characteristics of coarse particulate matter air pollution associated with alterations in blood pressure and heart rate during controlled exposures. Journal Of Exposure Science & Environmental Epidemiology 2014, 25: 153-159. PMID: 25227729, PMCID: PMC4462122, DOI: 10.1038/jes.2014.62.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsCoarse PMPM massEffects of coarse PMCoarse PM massAmbient coarse PMRural locationsSystolic BPMetrics of exposureBlood pressurePotential health effectsHeart ratePM elementsElevated systolic BPFiltered airAerodynamic diameterDiastolic BP changesMixed model analysisConcentration-response mannerParticulate massFilter samplesParticle constituentsDiastolic BPMeasured elementsHealthy adultsAssociated with similar degrees
2012
Air pollution and respiratory symptoms among children with asthma: Vulnerability by corticosteroid use and residence area
Lewis T, Robins T, Mentz G, Zhang X, Mukherjee B, Lin X, Keeler G, Dvonch J, Yip F, O'Neill M, Parker E, Israel B, Max P, Reyes A, Committee C. Air pollution and respiratory symptoms among children with asthma: Vulnerability by corticosteroid use and residence area. The Science Of The Total Environment 2012, 448: 48-55. PMID: 23273373, PMCID: PMC4327853, DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2012.11.070.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsParticulate matterAir pollutionAssociated with negative health impactsAmbient pollutant concentrationsAir quality standardsAmbient air pollutionAmbient particulate matterEffective risk reduction interventionsOdds of respiratory symptomsAsthmatic childrenFactors associated with heterogeneityAssociated with increased oddsObserved health effectsRespiratory symptomsRisk reduction interventionsPopulation of asthmatic childrenRespiratory symptom diariesOutdoor PMDaily concentrationsPollutant concentrationsMonitoring sitesGeneralized estimating equationsPollution modelLogistic regression modelsAerodynamic diameter