山火事の煙の微粒子による心肺への影響は、火災が終息した後でも数ヶ月間持続する可能性がある(Cardiorespiratory Effects of Wildfire Smoke Particles Can Persist for Months, Even After a Fire Has Ended)

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2025-05-28 マウントサイナイ医療システム (MSHS)

マウントサイナイ医科大学とハーバード公衆衛生大学院の研究により、野火の煙に含まれるPM2.5による心肺への健康影響が、火災後も最大3か月間持続することが明らかになりました。PM2.5は酸化ストレスや炎症を引き起こしやすく、虚血性心疾患やCOPD、喘息などのリスクを高めます。特に植生が多い地域や社会的弱者層、喫煙歴のある人で影響が顕著で、研究は中期的なリスク評価の重要性を示しています。

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山火事煙PM2.5への中期暴露と心肺入院リスク Medium-term exposure to wildfire smoke PM2.5 and cardiorespiratory hospitalization risks

Wei, Yaguang; Castro, Edgar; Yin, Kanhua; Shtein, Alexandra; Vu, Bryan N.; Danesh Yazdi, Mahdieh; Li, Longxiang; Liu, Yuxi; Peralta, Adjani A.; Schwartz, Joel D.
Epidemiology  Published:May 28, 2025
DOI:10.1097/EDE.0000000000001881

Abstract

Background:

Wildfire activity in the US has increased substantially in recent decades. Smoke PM2.5, a primary wildfire emission, can spike for months after a wildfire begins, yet large-scale evidence of its health effects remains limited.

Methods:

We obtained hospitalization records for the residents of 15 states between 2006–2016 from the State Inpatient Databases. We used existing daily smoke PM2.5 estimations at 10-km2 grid cells across the contiguous US, and aggregated them to ZIP codes to match the spatial resolution of hospitalization records. We extended traditional case–crossover design, a self-controlled design originally developed for studying acute effects, to examine associations between 3-month average exposure to smoke PM2.5 and hospitalization risks for a comprehensive range of cardiovascular (ischemic heart disease, cerebrovascular disease, heart failure, arrhythmia, hypertension, other cardiovascular diseases) and respiratory diseases (acute respiratory infections, pneumonia, COPD, asthma, other respiratory diseases).

Results:

We found that 3-month exposure to smoke PM2.5 was associated or marginally associated with increased hospitalization risks for most cardiorespiratory diseases. Hypertension showed the greatest susceptibility, with the highest hospitalization risk associated with 0.1 µg/m3 increase in 3-month smoke PM2.5 exposure (relative risk: 1.0051; 95% confidence interval: 1.0035, 1.0067). Results for single-month lagged exposures suggested that estimated effects persisted up to 3 months after exposure. Subgroup analyses estimated larger effects in neighborhoods with higher deprivation level or more vegetation, as well as among ever-smokers.

Conclusions:

Our findings provided unique insights into medium-term cardiorespiratory effects of smoke PM2.5, which can persist for months, even after a wildfire has ended.

医療・健康
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