作者
Ruijun Xu,Qingqing Wang,Jing Wei,Wenfeng Lu,Rui Wang,Tingting Liu,Yaqi Wang,Zhaoyu Fan,Yingxin Li,Luxi Xu,Chunxiang Shi,Guo Li,Gongbo Chen,Lan Zhang,Yun Zhou,Yuewei Liu,Hong Sun
摘要
Abstract Background Short‐term exposure to ambient air pollution has been linked to increased risk of stroke mortality, but its adverse effects on mortality from specific types of stroke including ischemic stroke and hemorrhagic stroke remain poorly understood. Methods Using the China National Mortality Surveillance System, we conducted a time‐stratified case‐crossover study among 412,567 stroke deaths in Jiangsu province, China during 2015–2019. Residential daily PM 2.5 , PM 10 , SO 2 , NO 2 , CO, and O 3 exposure concentrations were extracted from the ChinaHighAirPollutants dataset for each subject. Conditional logistic regression models were performed to conduct exposure–response analyses. Results Each 10 μg/m 3 increase of PM 2.5 , PM 10 , SO 2 , NO 2 , CO, and O 3 was respectively associated with a 1.44%, 0.93%, 5.55%, 2.90%, 0.148%, and 0.54% increase in odds of mortality from ischemic stroke, which was significantly stronger than that from hemorrhagic stroke (percent change in odds: 0.74%, 0.51%, 3.11%, 1.15%, 0.090%, and 0.10%). The excess fraction of ischemic stroke mortality associated with PM 2.5 , PM 10 , SO 2 , NO 2 , CO, and O 3 exposure was 6.90%, 6.48%, 8.21%, 8.61%, 9.67%, and 4.76%, respectively, which was also significantly higher than that of hemorrhagic stroke mortality (excess fraction: 3.49%, 3.48%, 4.69%, 3.48%, 5.86%, and 0.88%). These differences in adverse effects generally remained across sex, age, and season. Conclusions Short‐term exposure to ambient air pollution was significantly associated with increased risk of both ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke mortality and posed considerable excess mortality. Our results suggest that air pollution exposure may lead to substantially greater adverse effects on mortality from ischemic stroke than that from hemorrhagic stroke.