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Indoor formaldehyde exposure and asthma in adults : a systematic reviewShi, Dai, 时代 January 2014 (has links)
Introduction
Due to its widespread use, toxicity and volatility, exposure to the chemical formaldehyde has important implications for human health. Asthma is a common chronic inflammatory disease with both genetic and environmental factors. The common symptoms of asthma include wheezing, coughing, and shortness of breath. The objective of the present study is to evaluate the association between exposure to formaldehyde and adult asthma through systematic review.
Methods
A literature search was conducted using PubMed with keywords of formaldehyde, adult asthma, and other relevant terms.
The basic exclusion and inclusion criteria in this study are as follows:
Original randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and observational studies were eligible, but not editorials, reviews, case-reports and case‐series. Studies that focused on behavioral change or other outcomes unrelated to asthma were excluded. Lastly, articles in which full text was unavailable were excluded.
Finally, after 3 selection rounds, 7 studies were included in the present systematic review.
Results:
These 7 studies included 3 RCTs, 2 case‐control studies and 2 cross‐sectional studies, published from 1986 to 2013. The 3 RCTs examined participants with and without asthma and investigated the acute effects of formaldehyde on respiratory phenotypes; in contrast, the 4 observational studies examined the long‐term effects of low dose formaldehyde exposure on asthma.
Only
1 RCT reported a strong association between formaldehyde and adult asthma, with the intervention group developed an immediate bronchial response at a significantly lower dose of mite allergen than that of the control group with air exposure. The other 2 RCTs found no significant deleterious effect on airway allergen responses after exposure to 500 μg/m3 formaldehyde; and the concentration of formaldehyde found in the indoor environment was of minor importance for developing pulmonary symptoms.
Two case-control studies reported a positive association between formaldehyde exposure and asthma symptoms, while the results in the cross‐sectional studies suggested no significant association between formaldehyde exposure and adult asthma.
Conclusions
Among the 3 reviewed RCTs, only 1 reported a significant association between formaldehyde and asthma. In the 4 reviewed case‐control and cross‐sectional studies, 2 suggested that exposure to formaldehyde had significant effects on bronchial responses. However, these studies represented different characteristics, hence, after integration of them, this review suggests that exposure to formaldehyde in relative low concentration may not have strong association with adult asthma. However, further studies are required to A: Try to identify more potential confounders and choose most suitable model in various conditions; B: investigate multiple patterns of formaldehyde exposure and provide different outcome measurements in RCTs. In addition, this report indicates that it is important to increase the population awareness of choosing environmental friendly decoration materials for reducing formaldehyde exposure. / published_or_final_version / Public Health / Master / Master of Public Health
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The association between maternal formaldehyde internal exposure does and miscarriage in Guangzhou, ChinaXu, Wenjing, 许文静 January 2012 (has links)
Background: Pregnancy is the fertilization and development of one or more offspring. It is a period of significant importance, during the time of which, health status of the mother could have profound impact on that of the fetus. Due to the one child policy in Mainland China, ensuring the baby’s health is of the utmost priority. In the past two years the incidence rate of miscarriage has been gradually increasing. It has an impact on mothers both physically and psychologically. Formaldehyde can be released for a long time from compound and furniture products in newly decorated houses and have become a chronic source of pollution. We are interested in whether there is any association between miscarriage and formaldehyde exposure. If the association exists, the evidence could be applied to support further research to identify the sources of formaldehyde and to support formulation of environmental public health policy to reduce formaldehyde exposure.
Objectives:
(1) To estimate whether the serum formaldehyde concentrations were different between miscarriage women and normal pregnant women at the same stage. (2) To investigate the normal serum formaldehyde concentration in pregnant women; and (3) to identify exposure factors in miscarriage patients.
Setting:Guangzhou Women and Children’s Medical Centre
Method: A case-control study was carried out to estimate the association between serum formaldehyde concentrations and miscarriage. 309 pregnant women who fulfilled the inclusion criteria participated in this study, 191 normal pregnant women at term delivery as the control group and 118 women who were diagnosed with miscarriage as the case group. The main outcome was miscarriage confirmed by ultrasound and physicians. The main exposure variable was serum formaldehyde concentration. Binary logistic regression was used to estimate the crude and adjusted odds ratios for a diagnosis of miscarriage for each independent variable. The odds ratio (OR) would be used to estimate the relative risk of the serum formaldehyde concentration in miscarriage women compared with those women who were not diagnosed miscarriage. We also categorized the values of formaldehyde into quartile, and put them into logistic regression as continuous variable to test the linear dose-response relationship. Then we tested whether there would be a significant linear trend that the increasing of serum formaldehyde concentration level leads to the increased risk of miscarriage. Chi-squared tests were performed to test the association between diagnosis of miscarriage and various independent variables. And Chi-squared tests for linear trend were also used for ordinal independent to study any dose-response relationship.
Results:The mean serum formaldehyde concentration was 0.0944 in the case group and 0.0239 in the control group. The difference was statistically significant. All characteristics between case group and control group were quite similar. After adjusting for age, occupation,education level, household income, home decoration situation, the following factors remained having independent impact on the miscarriage. They were formaldehyde and second-hand smoke (crude ORs=7.87 [95%CI: 4.96, 12.49]; 3.20[95%CI: 1.86, 5.52] respectively, adjusted ORs=8.06 [95%CI: 4.96, 13.09]; 3.60[95%CI: 1.58, 8.20] respectively). Exposure to formaldehyde and second-hand smoke were significantly associated with higher risk of miscarriage. The liner dose response association between formaldehyde level and miscarriage was presented with P value for trend less than 0.001.
Conclusions:Our study provided some evidence of the association between the serum formaldehyde level and miscarriage. A significant linear trend was found that the increasing of serum formaldehyde concentration level lead to the increase the risk of miscarriage. And we also found that second-hand smoking was contributive to miscarriage. This association did not confound by age, occupation, education level, household income, or home decoration situation. / published_or_final_version / Public Health / Master / Master of Public Health
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Wheeze during the first 18 months of life: a prospective cohort study to explore the associations with indoor nitrogen dioxide, formaldehyde and family history of asthma. / 對室内二氧化氮、甲醛、哮喘家族史和18個月或以下幼童初發性哮喘的關係序列研究 / CUHK electronic theses & dissertations collection / Dui shi nei er yang hua dan, jia quan, xiao chuan jia zu shi he 18 ge yue huo yi xia you tong chu fa xing xiao chuan de guan xi xu lie yan jiuJanuary 2011 (has links)
Fung, Kit Ching. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2011. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 134-144). / Electronic reproduction. Hong Kong : Chinese University of Hong Kong, [2012] System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader. Available via World Wide Web. / Abstract also in Chinese. / Some appendixes in Chinese.
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