Association between short-term exposure to meteorological factors on hospital admissions for hemorrhagic stroke: an individual-level, case-crossover study in Ganzhou, China.

IF 4 3区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Kailun Pan, Fen Lin, Kai Huang, Songbing Zeng, Mingwei Guo, Jie Cao, Haifa Dong, Jianing Wei, Qiujiang Xi
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Hemorrhagic stroke (HS) is associated with significant disability and mortality. However, the relationship between meteorological factors and hemorrhagic stroke, as well as the potential moderating role of these factors, remains unclear.

Methods: Daily data on HS, air pollution, and meteorological conditions were collected from January 2015 to December 2021 in Ganzhou to analyze the relationship between meteorological factors and HS admissions. This analysis employed a time-stratified case-crossover design in conjunction with a distributional lag nonlinear model. Additionally, a bivariate response surface modelling was utilized to further investigate the interaction between meteorological factors and particulate matter. The study also stratified the analyses by gender and age. To investigate the potential impact of extreme weather conditions on HS, this study defined the 97.5th percentile as representing extremely high weather conditions, while the 2.5th percentile was classified as extremely low.

Results: In single-day lags, the risk of admissions for HS was significantly associated with extremely low temperature (lag 1-2 and lag 13-14), extremely low humidity (lag 1 and lag 9-12), and extremely high precipitation (lag 2-7). Females exhibited greater susceptibility to extremely low temperature than males within the single-day lag pattern in the subcomponent layer, with a maximum relative risk (RR) that was 7% higher. In the cumulative lag analysis, the risk of HS admissions was significantly associated with extremely high temperature (lag 0-8∼lag 0-14), extremely low humidity (lag 0-2∼lag 0-14), and extremely high precipitation (lag 0-4∼lag 0-14). Within the cumulative lag day structure of the subcomponent layer, both extremely low and extremely high temperature had a more pronounced effect on females and aged ≥65 years. The risk of HS admissions was positively associated with extremely high barometric pressure in the female subgroups (lag 0-1 and lag 0-2). The highest number of HS admissions occurred when high PM2.5 concentrations coexisted with low precipitation.

Conclusions: Meteorological factors were significantly associated with the risk of hospital admissions for HS. Individuals who were female and aged ≥65 years were found to be more susceptible to these meteorological influences. Additionally, an interaction was observed between airborne particulate matter and meteorological factors. These findings contributed new evidence to the association between meteorological factors and HS.

短期暴露于气象因素与出血性中风住院之间的关系:中国赣州一项个体水平的病例交叉研究
背景:出血性卒中(HS)与显著的残疾和死亡率相关。然而,气象因素与出血性中风之间的关系以及这些因素的潜在调节作用仍不清楚。方法:收集赣州市2015年1月- 2021年12月的HS、大气污染和气象条件的日常数据,分析气象因素与HS入院的关系。该分析采用时间分层病例交叉设计,并结合分布滞后非线性模型。此外,利用二元响应面模型进一步研究气象因子与颗粒物之间的相互作用。该研究还按性别和年龄进行了分层分析。为了调查极端天气条件对HS的潜在影响,本研究将97.5%定义为极端天气条件,而将2.5%定义为极低天气条件。结果:在单天滞后中,HS入院风险与极低温度(滞后1-2和滞后13-14)、极低湿度(滞后1和滞后9-12)和极高降水(滞后2-7)显著相关。在亚成分层的1天滞后模式中,雌性对极低温的敏感性高于雄性,最大相对危险度(RR)高出7%。在累积滞后分析中,HS入院风险与极高温(滞后0-8 ~滞后0-14)、极低湿度(滞后0-2 ~滞后0-14)和极高降水(滞后0-4 ~滞后0-14)显著相关。在子成分层的累积滞后日结构中,极低温和极高温对女性和≥65岁的老年人的影响更为显著。在女性亚组中,HS入院的风险与极高的气压呈正相关(滞后0-1和滞后0-2)。高PM2.5浓度与低降水共存时,HS入院人数最多。结论:气象因素与HS住院风险显著相关。年龄≥65岁的女性更容易受到这些气象影响。此外,大气颗粒物与气象因子之间存在交互作用。这些发现为气象因子与HS之间的关系提供了新的证据。
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来源期刊
Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine
Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH -
CiteScore
7.90
自引率
2.10%
发文量
44
审稿时长
10 weeks
期刊介绍: The official journal of the Japanese Society for Hygiene, Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine (EHPM) brings a comprehensive approach to prevention and environmental health related to medical, biological, molecular biological, genetic, physical, psychosocial, chemical, and other environmental factors. Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine features definitive studies on human health sciences and provides comprehensive and unique information to a worldwide readership.
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