Ozone Can Affect Heavier People More
A new study provides the first evidence that people with higher body mass
index (BMI) may have a greater response to ozone than leaner people. Short-term
exposure to atmospheric ozone has long been known to cause a temporary drop
in lung function in many people. This is the first study in humans to look
at whether body weight influenced how much lung function falls after acute
ozone exposure. Ozone is formed in the atmosphere in the presence of sunlight
from other pollutants emitted from vehicles and other sources. Exposure occurs
when people inhale air containing ozone.
Researchers at the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
(NIEHS), part of the National Institutes of Health, the University of North
Carolina (UNC) at Chapel Hill, and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) analyzed data on young (18-35 years), healthy, non-smoking men and
women to see if BMI -- a measure of the amount of fat a person has -- had
an effect on lung response to acute ozone exposure. The study published
this month in the journal "Inhalation Toxicology" found that ozone response
was greater with increasing BMI.
"It has been known for a long time that in response to short-term exposure
to ozone lung function tends to temporarily drop in many people. There has
recently been interest in why some people's lung function drops more than
others -- age and perhaps genetics, as well as diet may play a role, " said
NIEHS researcher and co-author Stephanie London, M.D. "We were intrigued by
recent mouse studies that showed that obesity increases lung responses to
ozone and wanted to see whether this applied in humans."
To examine the question of whether higher body mass index influences
ozone responses in humans, the investigators took advantage of an earlier
study led by Milan J. Hazucha and colleagues at the Center for Environmental
Medicine, Asthma and Lung Biology /UNC and the USEPA Human Studies Facility
in Chapel Hill, N.C. From this study, BMI was determined in 197 subjects who
had been exposed to ozone for 90 minutes, during which they alternated 20
minutes of exercise with 10 minutes of rest. The subjects' lung capacity
and function were tested immediately before and after the exposure period
using spirometry, a basic lung function test that measures the speed and
volume of how fast and how much air is breathed out of the lungs.
In general, the higher the BMI, the greater the ozone response, providing
one more reason why maintaining a healthy body weight is important to your
health. When subjects were put into categories of body fatness defined by
the US Centers for Disease Control based on their BMI, the ozone-related
drops in lung function, particularly the forced expiratory volume in one
second (FEV1), were lowest in underweight people (BMI less than 18.5),
greater in normal weight people (BMI 18.5 to 25) and greatest in overweight
individuals (BMI above 25). BMI is a measure of fatness based on an
individual's height and weight.
"It's notable that these results came out of a study that was done
in a population of predominantly normal weight individuals," said London.
"This suggests that these effects may be even more important in the general
population where there are large proportions of overweight and obese
individuals." An estimated two-thirds of U.S. adults are overweight or obese,
with a BMI greater than 25, according to CDC[i].
The physiologic mechanisms responsible for the decline in lung function
after ozone exposure with increasing BMI are not clear, although the authors
suggest that perhaps circulatory hormones and other inflammatory factors may
play a role. These factors have been shown to affect airway hyper-responsiveness
and inflammation in animal models.
The authors note too that the study was limited in the small number of obese
individuals (the subjects had not been selected with a study of BMI in mind)
and by having only one measure of a person's body fat. Future studies of the
effects of obesity on ozone response, they say, should include a targeted pool
of obese and lower weight subjects, as well as measures of central adiposity
such as waist circumference, given that fat deposited centrally may have a
greater influence on an individual's respiratory response to ozone.
The study was supported by U.S. EPA Cooperative Agreement CR824915 and
CR829522 and in part by the Division of Intramural Research, NIEHS, NIH, HHS.