학술논문

Estimating the associations of apparent temperature and inflammatory, hemostatic, and lipid markers in a cohort of midlife women
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Biological Sciences
Environmental Sciences
Chemical Sciences
Prevention
Heart Disease
Cardiovascular
Aging
Good Health and Well Being
Biomarkers
Blood Chemical Analysis
Cities
Female
Humans
Inflammation
Lipids
Longitudinal Studies
Menopause
Middle Aged
Temperature
United States
Women's Health
temperature
heat
cold
markers
inflammatory
hemostatic
lipid
cohort
epidemiology
Toxicology
Biological sciences
Chemical sciences
Environmental sciences
Language
Abstract
Associations between temperature and cardiovascular (CVD) mortality have been reported, but the underlying biological mechanisms remain uncertain. We explored the association between apparent temperature and serum biomarkers for CVD. Using linear mixed effects models, we examined the relationships between residence-proximate apparent temperature (same day and 1, 7, and 30 days prior) and several inflammatory, hemostatic, and lipid biomarkers for midlife women from 1999 through 2004. Our study population consisted of 2,306 women with mean age of 51 years (± 3 years) enrolled in Study of Women's Health Across the Nation (SWAN) in Chicago, Illinois; Detroit, Michigan; Los Angeles and Oakland, California; Newark, New Jersey; and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Mean daily apparent temperature was calculated using temperature and relative humidity data provided by the National Climatic Data Center and the US Environmental Protection Agency, while daily data for fine particles, ozone, carbon monoxide, and nitrogen dioxide from the US Environmental Protection Agency Air Quality Data Mart were considered as confounders. All analyses were stratified by warm and cold seasons. More significant (p