Time Course of Heart Rate Variability Decline Following Particulate Matter Exposures in an Occupational Cohort
Authors:
Jennifer M. Cavallari a;
Shona C. Fang a;
Ellen A. Eisen a;
Joel Schwartz a;
Russ Hauser a;
Robert F. Herrick a;
David C. Christiani ab
| Affiliations: | a Department of Environmental Health, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, USA |
| b Pulmonary and Critical Care Unit, Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital; and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA |
DOI:
10.1080/08958370801903800
Publication Frequency:
4 issues per year
Subjects:
Inhalation Toxicology;
Pulmonary Medicine;
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Abstract
Although research suggests that particles influence cardiac autonomic response as evidenced by decreases in heart rate variability (HRV), the time course of the response remains unclear. Using a crossover panel study, we monitored 36 male boilermaker welders, occupationally exposed to metal-rich particulate matter (PM) to investigate the temporal trend of hourly HRV subsequent to PM exposure. Ambulatory electrocardiograms were collected over work (exposure) and non-work (control) periods and the mean of the standard deviations of all normal-to-normal intervals for all 5-min segments (SDNNi) was calculated hourly for up to 14-hrs post-work. The exposure-response relationship was examined with linear mixed effects regression models to account for participants monitored over multiple occasions. Models were adjusted for non-work HRV to control for diurnal fluctuations and individual predictors of HRV. The mean (SD) work PM2. 5 concentration was 1.12 (0.76) mg/m3. Hourly SDNNi was consistently lower post-work as compared to the same time period on a non-work day. HRV was inversely associated with work PM2. 5 exposures in each of the 14-hrs post-work. The hourly associations suggested an early and later phase response, with the largest regression coefficients observed 2-3 hrs (β = -6.86 (95% CI: -11.91, -1.81) msec/1 mg/m3 at 3-hrs), and then 9-13 hrs (β = -8.60 (95% CI: -17.45, 0.24) msec/1 mg/m3 at 11-hrs), after adjusting for non-work HRV, smoking status, and age. This investigation demonstrates declines in HRV for up to 14 hours following PM exposure and a multiphase cardiovascular autonomic response with immediate (2 hrs) and delayed (9-13 hrs) responses.
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