Exposure to nitrogen dioxide and the occurrence of bronchial obstruction in children below 2 years

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Abstract

Background. The objective of the investigation was to test the hypothesis that exposure to nitrogen dioxide (NO2) has a causal influence on the occurrence of bronchial obstruction in children below 2 years of age. Methods. A nested case-control study with 153 one-to-one matched pairs was conducted within a cohort of 3754 children born in Oslo in 1992/93. Cases were children who developed ≥ 2 episodes of bronchial obstruction or one episode lasting > 4 weeks. Controls were matched for date of birth. Exposure measurements were performed in the same 14-day period within matched pairs. The NO2 exposure was measured with personal samplers carried close to each child and by stationary samplers outdoors and indoors. Results. Few children (4.6%) were exposed to levels of NO2 ≥ 30 μg/m3 (average concentration during a 14-day period). In the 153 matched pairs, the mean level of NO2 was 15.65 μg/m3 (± 0.60, SE) among cases and 15.37 (± 0.54) among controls (paired t = 0.38, P = 0.71). Conclusions. The results suggest that NO2 exposure at levels observed in this study has no detectable effect on the risk of developing bronchial obstruction in children below 2 years of age.

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Magnus, P., Nafstad, P., Øie, L., Carlsen, K. C. L., Becher, G., Kongerud, J., … Bakketeig, L. S. (1998). Exposure to nitrogen dioxide and the occurrence of bronchial obstruction in children below 2 years. International Journal of Epidemiology, 27(6), 995–999. https://doi.org/10.1093/ije/27.6.995

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