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Pulmonary Benefits of Intervention with Air Cleaner among Schoolchildren in Beijing: A Randomized Double-Blind Crossover Study

Xiaoyan Yang, Qin Wang, Feng Han, Bin Dong, Bo Wen, Li Li, Hongjie Ruan, Shaoping Zhang, Jian Kong, Zhi Hong, Chong Wang, Jun Wang, Ming Zhang, Dongqun Xu

2021Environmental Science & Technology11 citationsDOI

Abstract

We conducted a crossover study employing air cleaner intervention among 125 schoolchildren aged 9–12 years in a boarding school in Beijing, China. The PM concentrations were monitored, and 27 biomarkers were analyzed. We used the linear mixed-effects model to evaluate the association of intervention/time-weighted PM concentrations with biomarkers. The outcomes showed that air cleaner intervention was associated with FeNO, exhaled breath condensate (EBC) IL-1β, and IL-6, which decreased by 12.57%, 10.83%, and 4.33%, respectively. Similar results were observed in the associations with PMs. Lag 1 day PMs had the strongest relationship with biomarkers, and significant changes were observed in biomarkers such as FEV1, FeNO, EBC 8-iso, and MCP-1. Boys showed higher percentage changes than girls, and the related biomarkers were FeNO, EBC 4-HNE, IL-1β, IL-6, and MCP-1. The results showed that biomarkers such as FeNO, EBC IL-6, MCP-1, and 4-HNE could sensitively reflect the early abnormal response of the respiratory system under short-term PM exposure among healthy schoolchildren and indicated that (1) air cleaners exert a protective effect on children’s respiratory system. (2) PM had lag and cumulative effect, lag 1 day had the greatest effect. (3) The boys were more sensitive than the girls.

Topics & Concepts

Exhaled breath condensateCrossover studyMedicineBeijingRespiratory systemSecondhand smokeInternal medicineEnvironmental healthChinaPathologyAsthmaAlternative medicinePolitical sciencePlaceboLawAir Quality and Health ImpactsAsthma and respiratory diseasesChronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) Research