Air pollution, methane super-emitters, and oil and gas wells in Northern California: the relationship with migraine headache prevalence and exacerbation.

Holly Elser, Rachel Morello-Frosch, Alice Jacobson, Alice Pressman, Marianthi-Anna Kioumourtzoglou, Richard Reimer, Joan A Casey
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

Background: Migraine-an episodic disorder characterized by severe headache that can lead to disability-affects over 1 billion people worldwide. Prior studies have found that short-term exposure to fine particulate matter (PM2.5), nitrogen dioxide (NO2), and ozone increases risk of migraine-related emergency department (ED) visits. Our objective was to characterize the association between long-term exposure to sources of harmful emissions and common air pollutants with both migraine headache and, among patients with migraine, headache severity.

Methods: From the Sutter Health electronic health record database, we identified 89,575 prevalent migraine cases between 2014 and 2018 using a migraine probability algorithm (MPA) score and 270,564 frequency-matched controls. Sutter Health delivers care to 3.5 million patients annually in Northern California. Exposures included 2015 annual average block group-level PM2.5 and NO2 concentrations, inverse-distance weighted (IDW) methane emissions from 60 super-emitters located within 10 km of participant residence between 2016 and 2018, and IDW active oil and gas wells in 2015 within 10 km of each participant. We used logistic and negative binomial mixed models to evaluate the association between environmental exposures and (1) migraine case status; and (2) migraine severity (i.e., MPA score > 100, triptan prescriptions, neurology visits, urgent care migraine visits, and ED migraine visits per person-year). Models controlled for age, sex, race/ethnicity, Medicaid use, primary care visits, and block group-level population density and poverty.

Results: In adjusted analyses, for each 5 ppb increase in NO2, we observed 2% increased odds of migraine case status (95% CI: 1.00, 1.05) and for each 100,000 kg/hour increase in IDW methane emissions, the odds of case status also increased (OR = 1.04, 95% CI: 1.00, 1.08). We found no association between PM2.5 or oil and gas wells and migraine case status. PM2.5 was linearly associated with neurology visits, migraine-specific urgent care visits, and MPA score > 100, but not triptans or ED visits. NO2 was associated with migraine-specific urgent care and ED visits, but not other severity measures. We observed limited or null associations between continuous measures of methane emissions and proximity to oil and gas wells and migraine severity.

Conclusions: Our findings illustrate the potential role of long-term exposure to multiple ambient air pollutants for prevalent migraine and migraine severity.

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北加州的空气污染、甲烷超级排放者、石油和天然气井:与偏头痛流行和恶化的关系。
背景:偏头痛是一种以严重头痛为特征的发作性疾病,可导致残疾,影响着全世界超过10亿人。先前的研究发现,短期暴露于细颗粒物(PM2.5)、二氧化氮(NO2)和臭氧会增加偏头痛相关急诊(ED)就诊的风险。我们的目的是描述长期暴露于有害排放物源和常见空气污染物与偏头痛以及偏头痛患者中头痛严重程度之间的关系。方法:从Sutter Health电子健康记录数据库中,我们使用偏头痛概率算法(MPA)评分确定了2014年至2018年间89,575例偏头痛流行病例和270,564例频率匹配对照。萨特健康每年为北加州的350万患者提供医疗服务。暴露包括2015年平均街区组级PM2.5和NO2浓度,2016年至2018年间位于参与者住所10公里内的60个超级排放者的反距离加权(IDW)甲烷排放量,以及2015年每个参与者10公里内的IDW活跃油气井。我们使用logistic和负二项混合模型来评估环境暴露与(1)偏头痛病例状态之间的关系;(2)偏头痛严重程度(即MPA评分> 100、曲坦类药物处方、神经科就诊、急诊偏头痛就诊和ED偏头痛就诊)。模型控制了年龄、性别、种族/民族、医疗补助使用情况、初级保健就诊情况以及街区群体水平的人口密度和贫困。结果:在调整后的分析中,NO2每增加5 ppb,我们观察到偏头痛病例状态的几率增加2% (95% CI: 1.00, 1.05), IDW甲烷排放量每增加100,000 kg/h,病例状态的几率也增加(OR = 1.04, 95% CI: 1.00, 1.08)。我们发现PM2.5或油气井与偏头痛病例状态之间没有关联。PM2.5与神经科就诊、偏头痛特异性急诊就诊和MPA评分> 100呈线性相关,但与曲坦类药物或急诊科就诊无关。NO2与偏头痛特异性紧急护理和急诊科就诊有关,但与其他严重程度指标无关。我们观察到,连续测量甲烷排放量与油气井和偏头痛严重程度之间的关联有限或为零。结论:我们的研究结果说明了长期暴露于多种环境空气污染物对偏头痛流行和偏头痛严重程度的潜在作用。
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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