肌萎缩
固体燃料
危险系数
环境卫生
置信区间
比例危险模型
医学
横断面研究
中国
混淆
环境科学
废物管理
燃烧
工程类
内科学
化学
地理
有机化学
病理
考古
作者
Bing Zhang,Liping Huang,Xiaoyan Zhu,Longmei Ran,Hang Zhao,Zhigang Zhu,Yuqing Wang
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.162814
摘要
Household air pollution from solid fuel combustion is a leading cause of age-related diseases worldwide. However, little is known about the association between indoor solid fuel use and sarcopenia, especially in developing countries.A total of 10,261 and 5129 participants from the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study were enrolled in the cross-sectional and follow-up analysis, respectively. The effects of household solid fuel use (for cooking and heating) on sarcopenia were evaluated using generalized linear models in the cross-sectional analysis and Cox proportional hazards regression models in the longitudinal analysis.The prevalence of sarcopenia in the total population, clean cooking fuel users, and solid cooking fuel users were 13.6 % (1396/10,261), 9.1 % (374/4114), and 16.6 % (1022/6147), respectively. A similar pattern was observed for heating fuel users, with a higher prevalence of sarcopenia among solid fuel users (15.5 %) than among clean fuel users (10.7 %). In the cross-sectional analysis, solid fuel use for cooking/heating, separately or simultaneously, was positively associated with an elevated risk of sarcopenia after adjusting for potential confounders. During the four-years follow-up period, 330 participants (6.4 %) with sarcopenia were identified. The multivariate-adjusted hazard ratio (HR) (95 % confidence interval [95 % CI]) for solid cooking fuel users and solid heating fuel users was 1.86(95 % CI:1.43-2.41) and 1.32(95 % CI:1.05-1.66), respectively. Moreover, compared with persistent clean fuel users, participants who switched from clean to solid fuel for heating appeared to have an increased risk of sarcopenia (HR:1.58; 95 % CI:1.08-2.31).Our findings show that household solid fuel use is a risk factor for sarcopenia development among middle-aged and older Chinese adults. The transition from solid to clean fuel use may help reduce the burden of sarcopenia in developing countries.
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