Short-term effects of air temperature on blood markers of coagulation and inflammation in potentially susceptible individuals

气温对潜在易感人群凝血和炎症血液标志物的短期影响

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作者:Claudia Luise Schäuble, Regina Hampel, Susanne Breitner, Regina Rückerl, Richard Phipps, David Diaz-Sanchez, Robert B Devlin, Jacqueline D Carter, Joleen Soukup, Robert Silbajoris, Lisa Dailey, Wolfgang Koenig, Josef Cyrys, Uta Geruschkat, Petra Belcredi, Ute Kraus, Annette Peters, Alexandra E Schne

Conclusions

The authors observed different temperature effects on blood markers in two potentially susceptible groups probably indicating varying underlying biological mechanisms. This study results might provide a link between temperature and cardiovascular events.

Methods

This prospective panel study was conducted between March 2007 and December 2008 in Augsburg, Germany. The study population comprised 187 participants with type 2 diabetes mellitus or impaired glucose tolerance and 87 participants with genetic polymorphisms on the detoxification and inflammation pathways. Overall, 1766 repeated blood measurements were collected. Hourly meteorology data were available from a central measurement site. The association between temperature and blood markers was analysed with additive mixed models.

Results

For type 2 diabetes mellitus and impaired glucose tolerance participants, the authors observed immediate, lagged and cumulative increases in fibrinogen (range of percentage changes in geometric mean: 0.6%-0.8%) and plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 (6.0%-10.1%) in association with a 5°C temperature decrement. Participants with a body mass index above 30 kg/m(2) as well as females showed particularly strong fibrinogen effects. In participants with the special genetic background, 5°C decreases in the 5-day average of temperature led to a change of 8.0% (95% CI 0.5% to 16.2%) in interleukin-6 and of -8.4% (95% CI -15.8% to -0.3%) in high-sensitivity C reactive protein, the latter driven by physically active individuals. Conclusions: The authors observed different temperature effects on blood markers in two potentially susceptible groups probably indicating varying underlying biological mechanisms. This study results might provide a link between temperature and cardiovascular events.

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