five

Associations between air pollution and cardio-respiratory physiological measures in older adults exercising outdoors

收藏
Taylor & Francis Group2024-02-19 更新2026-04-16 收录
下载链接:
https://tandf.figshare.com/articles/dataset/Associations_between_air_pollution_and_cardio-respiratory_physiological_measures_in_older_adults_exercising_outdoors/11359121/2
下载链接
链接失效反馈
官方服务:
资源简介:
We examined whether exercising indoors vs. outdoors reduced the cardio-respiratory effects of outdoor air pollution. Adults ≥55 were randomly assigned to exercise indoors when the Air Quality Health Index was ≥5 and outdoors on other days (intervention group, n = 37), or outdoors everyday (control group, n = 35). Both groups completed cardio-respiratory measurements before and after exercise for up to 10 weeks. Data were analyzed using linear mixed effect regression models. In the control group, an interquartile range increase in fine particulate matter (PM<sub>2.5</sub>) was associated with increases of 1.4% in heart rate (standard error (SE) = 0.7%) and 5.6% (SE = 2.6%) in malondialdehyde, and decreases of 5.6% (SE = 2.5%) to 16.5% (SE = 7.5%) in heart rate variability measures. While the hypothesized benefit of indoor vs. outdoor exercise could not be demonstrated due to an insufficient number of intervention days (n = 2), the study provides evidence of short-term effects of air pollution in older adults. ISRCTN #26552763.
提供机构:
Mason-Renton, Sarah; Rigden, Marc; Shutt, Robin H.; Jovic, Branka; Green, Martin S.; Pelletier, Guillaume; Mulholland, Marie; Chen, Li; Stieb, David; Kauri, Lisa M.; Andrade, Julie; Dobbin, Nina A.; Liu, Ling; Weichenthal, Scott A.; Luginaah, Isaac; Dales, Robert E.; Szyszkowicz, Mieczyslaw
创建时间:
2021-10-22
二维码
社区交流群
二维码
科研交流群
商业服务