2010
Part 2. Association of daily mortality with ambient air pollution, and effect modification by extremely high temperature in Wuhan, China.
Qian Z, He Q, Lin H, Kong L, Zhou D, Liang S, Zhu Z, Liao D, Liu W, Bentley C, Dan J, Wang B, Yang N, Xu S, Gong J, Wei H, Sun H, Qin Z. Part 2. Association of daily mortality with ambient air pollution, and effect modification by extremely high temperature in Wuhan, China. Research Report 2010, 91-217. PMID: 21446212.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsCause-specific mortalityDaily cause-specific mortalityAssociation of daily mortalityAmbient air pollutionAir pollutionGeneralized additive modelInternational Classification of DiseasesMortality dataDaily mortalityEffect modificationEffect estimatesPM10 effectsStatistically significant associationFixed-site air monitoring stationsNatural causesPM10 daily concentrationsLevels of PM10Studies of air pollutionAir monitoring stationsICD-9Daily mean concentrationsEnvironmental Monitoring CenterAir pollution levelsEstimated effectsExposure-response relation
2008
Ambient Particulate Air Pollution and Ectopy—The Environmental Epidemiology of Arrhythmogenesis in Women's Health Initiative Study, 1999–2004
Liao D, Whitsel E, Duan Y, Lin H, Quibrera P, Smith R, Peuquet D, Prineas R, Zhang Z, Anderson G. Ambient Particulate Air Pollution and Ectopy—The Environmental Epidemiology of Arrhythmogenesis in Women's Health Initiative Study, 1999–2004. Journal Of Toxicology And Environmental Health Part A 2008, 72: 30-38. PMID: 18979352, PMCID: PMC2586923, DOI: 10.1080/15287390802445483.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsWomen's Health Initiative studyAmbient particulate air pollutionSignificant effect modifiersTwo-stage random effects modelPM concentrationsRandom-effects modelEnvironmental Protection AgencyParticulate air pollutionEffect modificationEffect modifiersOdds ratioConfidence intervalsCigarette smokingAmbient PM(2.5PM(10SmokersDaily mean concentrationsInitiative studyU.S. Environmental Protection AgencyAir quality monitoringPM(2.5Supraventricular ectopyAcute exposureSmokingMean concentrationsAssociations Between Air Pollution and Peak Expiratory Flow Among Patients with Persistent Asthma
Qian Z, Lin H, Chinchilli V, Lehman E, Stewart W, Shah N, Duan Y, Craig T, Wilson W, Liao D, Lazarus S, Bascom R. Associations Between Air Pollution and Peak Expiratory Flow Among Patients with Persistent Asthma. Journal Of Toxicology And Environmental Health Part A 2008, 72: 39-46. PMID: 18979353, PMCID: PMC2848818, DOI: 10.1080/15287390802445517.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsAmbient air pollutionEffects of ambient air pollutionPeak expiratory flowPersistent asthmaMedication regimensEffects of PM(10Ambulatory care centersAir pollutionAerometric Information Retrieval SystemExpiratory flowAsthma medicationsGeneral populationCare centerAir pollution dataU.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Aerometric Information Retrieval SystemDaily mean concentrationsLong-acting beta-agonistsDaily average relative humidityAsthmaNegative associationClinical centersMedicationInhaled long-acting beta-agonistPM(10Association
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