Left ventricular function in relation to chronic residential air pollution in a general population
European Journal of Preventive Cardiology

Abstract
In view of the increasing heart failure epidemic and awareness of the adverse impact of environmental pollution on human health, we investigated the association of left ventricular structure and function with air pollutants in a general population.
In 671 randomly recruited Flemish (51.7% women; mean age, 50.4 years) we echocardiographically assessed left ventricular systolic strain and strain rate and the early and late peak velocities of transmitral blood flow and mitral annular movement (2005−2009). Using subject-level data, left ventricular function was cross-sectionally correlated with residential long-term exposure to air pollutants, including black carbon, PM2.5, PM10 (particulate matter) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2), while accounting for clustering by residential address and confounders.
Annual exposures to black carbon, PM2.5, PM10 and NO2 averaged 1.19, 13.0, 17.7, and 16.8 µg/m3. Systolic left ventricular function was worse (
Long-term low-level air pollution is associated with subclinical impairment of left ventricular performance and might be a risk factor for heart failure.
Contributors

Wen-Yi Yang
Author

Zhen-Yu Zhang
Author

Lutgarde Thijs
Author

Esmée M Bijnens
Author

Bram G Janssen
Author

Charlotte Vanpoucke
Author

Wouter Lefebvre
Author

Nicholas Cauwenberghs
Author

Fang-Fei Wei
Author

Aernout Luttun
Author

Peter Verhamme
Author

Etienne Van Hecke
Author

Tatiana Kuznetsova
Author

Jan D’hooge
Author

Tim S Nawrot
Author

Jan A Staessen
Author
