Associations between Air Pollution Exposure and Blood Pressure during Pregnancy among PRINCESA Cohort Participants

PRINCESA队列研究参与者孕期空气污染暴露与血压之间的关联

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Abstract

High blood pressure (BP) is a risk factor for hypertensive disease during pregnancy. Exposure to multiple toxic air pollutants can affect BP in pregnancy but has been rarely studied. We evaluated trimester-specific associations between air pollution exposure and systolic (SBP) and diastolic BP (DBP). Ozone (O(3)), sulfur dioxide (SO(2)), carbon monoxide (CO), nitrogen dioxide (NO(2)), and particulate matter less than 10 and 2.5 μm in aerodynamic diameter (PM(10), PM(2.5)) in the Pregnancy Research on Inflammation, Nutrition, & City Environment: Systematic Analyses (PRINCESA) study. Multipollutant generalized linear regression models with each pollutant and O(3) were fit. Due to nonlinear pollution/BP associations, results are presented for "below the median" or "above the median", where the beta estimate is the change in BP at a pollutant's median versus BP at the pollutant's minimum or maximum, respectively. Associations varied across trimesters and pollutants, and deleterious associations (higher blood pressure with higher pollution) were found only at pollutant values below the median: for SBP with NO(2) in the second and third trimesters, and PM(2.5) during the third trimester, and for DBP, PM(2.5)(,) and NO(2) in the second and third trimesters. Findings suggest that minimizing prenatal exposure to air pollution may reduce the risks of changes in BP.

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