Associations of Air Pollution on the Brain in Children: A Brain Imaging Study.

Guxens Mònica, J Lubczyńska Małgorzata, Pérez-Crespo Laura, L Muetzel Ryan, El Marroun Hanan, Basagaña Xavier, Hoek Gerard, Tiemeier Henning
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: Epidemiological studies are highlighting the negative effects of the exposure to air pollution on children's neurodevelopment. However, most studies assessed children's neurodevelopment using neuropsychological tests or questionnaires. Using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to precisely measure global and region-specific brain development would provide details of brain morphology and connectivity. This would help us understand the observed cognitive and behavioral changes related to air pollution exposure. Moreover, most studies assessed only a few air pollutants. This project investigates whether air pollution exposure to many pollutants during pregnancy and childhood is associated with the morphology and connectivity of the brain in school-age children and pre-adolescents.

Methods: We used data from the Generation R Study, a population-based birth cohort set up in Rotterdam, the Netherlands in 2002-2006 (n = 9,610). We used land-use regression (LUR) models to estimate the levels of 14 air pollutants at participant's homes during pregnancy and childhood: nitrogen oxides (NOx), nitrogen dioxide (NO2), particulate matter with aerodynamic diameter ≤10 μm (PM10) or ≤2.5 μm (PM2.5), PM between 10 μm and 2.5 μm (PMCOARSE), absorbance of the PM2.5 fraction - a measure of soot (PM2.5absorbance), the composition of PM2.5 such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), organic carbon (OC), copper (Cu), iron (Fe), silicon (Si), zinc (Zn), and the oxidative potential of PM2.5 evaluated using two acellular methods: dithiothreitol (OPDTT) and electron spin resonance (OPESR). We performed MRI measurements of structural morphology (i.e., brain volumes, cortical thickness, and cortical surface area) using T1-weighted images in 6- to 10-year-old school-age children and 9- to 12-year-old pre-adolescents, structural connectivity (i.e., white matter microstructure) using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) in pre-adolescents, and functional connectivity (i.e., connectivity score between brain areas) using resting-state functional MRI (rs-fMRI) in pre-adolescents. We assessed cognitive function using the Developmental Neuropsychological Assessment test (NEPSY-II) in school-age children. For each outcome, we ran regression analysis adjusted for several socioeconomic and lifestyle characteristics. We performed single-pollutant analyses followed by multipollutant analyses using the deletion/substitution/addition (DSA) approach.

Results: The project has air pollution and brain MRI data for 783 school-age children and 3,857 pre-adolescents. First, exposure to air pollution during pregnancy or childhood was not associated with global brain volumes (e.g., total brain, cortical gray matter, and cortical white matter) in school-age children or pre-adolescents. However, higher pregnancy or childhood exposure to several air pollutants was associated with a smaller corpus callosum and hippocampus, and a larger amygdala, nucleus accumbens, and cerebellum in pre-adolescents, but not in school-age children. Second, higher exposure to several air pollutants during pregnancy was associated with a thinner cortex in various regions of the brain in both school-age children and pre-adolescents. Higher exposure to air pollution during childhood was also associated with a thinner cortex in a single region in pre-adolescents. A thinner cortex in two regions mediated the association between higher exposure to air pollution during pregnancy and an impaired inhibitory control in school-age children. Third, higher exposure to air pollution during childhood was associated with smaller cortical surface areas in various regions of the brain except in a region where we observed a larger cortical surface area in pre-adolescents. In relation to brain structural connectivity, higher exposure to air pollution during pregnancy and childhood was associated with an alteration in white matter microstructure in pre-adolescents. In relation to brain functional connectivity, a higher exposure to air pollution, mainly during pregnancy and early childhood, was associated with a higher brain functional connectivity among several brain regions in pre-adolescents. Overall, we identified several air pollutants associated with brain structural morphology, structural connectivity, and functional connectivity, such as NOx, NO2, PM of various size fractions (i.e., PM10, PMCOARSE, and PM2.5), PM2.5absorbance, PAHs, OC, three elemental components of PM2.5 (i.e., Cu, Si, Zn), and the oxidative potential of PM2.5.

Conclusions: The results of this project suggest that exposure to air pollution during pregnancy and childhood play an adverse role in brain development. We observed this relationship even at levels of exposure that were below the European Union legislations. We acknowledge that identifying the independent effects of specific pollutants was particularly challenging. Most of our conclusions generally refer to traffic-related air pollutants. However, we did identify pollutants specifically originating from brake linings, tire wear, and tailpipe emissions from diesel combustion. The current direction toward innovative solutions for cleaner energy vehicles is a step in the right direction. However, our findings indicate that these measures might not be completely adequate to mitigate health problems attributable to traffic-related air pollution, as we also observed associations with markers of brake linings and tire wear.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

空气污染对儿童大脑的影响:一项脑成像研究。
流行病学研究强调暴露于空气污染对儿童神经发育的负面影响。然而,大多数研究都是通过神经心理学测试或问卷来评估儿童的神经发育。使用磁共振成像(MRI)来精确测量整体和特定区域的大脑发育,将提供大脑形态和连接的细节。这将有助于我们理解观察到的与空气污染暴露有关的认知和行为变化。此外,大多数研究只评估了几种空气污染物。该项目调查了在怀孕和童年期间暴露于许多污染物的空气污染是否与学龄儿童和青春期前的大脑形态和连通性有关。方法:我们使用来自R世代研究的数据,该研究是2002-2006年在荷兰鹿特丹建立的以人口为基础的出生队列(n = 9,610)。我们使用土地利用回归(LUR)模型来估计参与者在怀孕和童年期间家中14种空气污染物的水平:氮氧化物(NOx),二氧化氮(NO2),空气动力学直径≤10 μm的颗粒物(PM10)或≤2.5 μm的颗粒物(PM2.5), 10 μm至2.5 μm之间的PM (PMCOARSE), PM2.5部分的吸光度-烟灰的量度(PM2.5吸光度),PM2.5的成分,如多环芳烃(PAHs),有机碳(OC),铜(Cu),铁(Fe),硅(Si),锌(Zn),以及PM2.5的氧化电位使用两种非细胞方法进行评估:二硫苏糖醇(OPDTT)和电子自旋共振(OPESR)。我们对6- 10岁的学龄儿童和9- 12岁的青春期前儿童使用t1加权图像进行了结构形态学(即脑体积、皮质厚度和皮质表面积)的MRI测量,对青春期前儿童使用弥散张量成像(DTI)进行了结构连通性(即白质微结构)的MRI测量,对青春期前儿童使用静息状态功能MRI (rs-fMRI)进行了功能连通性(即脑区域之间的连通性评分)的MRI测量。我们使用发育神经心理评估测试(nepsyi - ii)评估学龄儿童的认知功能。对于每个结果,我们进行了回归分析,调整了几个社会经济和生活方式特征。我们进行了单一污染物分析,然后使用删除/替代/添加(DSA)方法进行了多污染物分析。结果:该项目拥有783名学龄儿童和3857名学龄前儿童的空气污染和脑MRI数据。首先,在怀孕或儿童时期暴露于空气污染与学龄儿童或青春期前的整体脑容量(例如,大脑总量、皮质灰质和皮质白质)无关。然而,妊娠期或儿童期暴露于几种空气污染物的程度越高,青春期前的胼胝体和海马体越小,杏仁核、伏隔核和小脑越大,而学龄儿童则不然。其次,怀孕期间暴露于几种空气污染物的时间越长,学龄儿童和青春期前儿童大脑各区域的皮层越薄。儿童时期暴露在空气污染中的时间越长,还会导致青春期前某一区域的大脑皮层变薄。两个区域的皮层变薄,在怀孕期间暴露于较高的空气污染和学龄儿童抑制控制受损之间起到了中介作用。第三,儿童时期暴露于空气污染的程度越高,大脑各区域的皮质表面积越小,除了我们在青春期前观察到的一个区域的皮质表面积更大。就大脑结构连通性而言,孕期和儿童期接触空气污染较多与青春期前白质微观结构的改变有关。在脑功能连通性方面,高暴露于空气污染(主要是在怀孕和幼儿时期)与青春期前几个大脑区域之间较高的脑功能连通性有关。总体而言,我们确定了几种与大脑结构形态、结构连通性和功能连通性相关的空气污染物,如NOx、NO2、不同粒径组分的PM(即PM10、PMCOARSE和PM2.5)、PM2.5吸光度、PAHs、OC、PM2.5的三种基本成分(即Cu、Si、Zn)和PM2.5的氧化电位。结论:本项目的结果表明,在怀孕和儿童时期接触空气污染对大脑发育有不利影响。即使在低于欧盟法规的暴露水平下,我们也观察到这种关系。我们承认,确定特定污染物的独立影响尤其具有挑战性。我们的大多数结论一般都涉及与交通有关的空气污染物。 然而,我们确实确定了来自刹车衬里、轮胎磨损和柴油燃烧尾气排放的污染物。目前针对清洁能源汽车的创新解决方案是朝着正确方向迈出的一步。然而,我们的研究结果表明,这些措施可能不足以完全缓解与交通相关的空气污染造成的健康问题,因为我们还观察到与刹车衬里和轮胎磨损标志物的联系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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