Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1942/25232
Title: Children’s Urinary Environmental Carbon Load:A Novel Marker Reflecting Residential Ambient Air Pollution Exposure?
Authors: SAENEN, Nelly 
BOVE, Hannelore 
Steuwe, Christian
Roeffaers, Maarten B.J.
PROVOST, Eline 
Lefebvre, Wouter
Vanpoucke, Charlotte
AMELOOT, Marcel 
NAWROT, Tim 
Issue Date: 2017
Source: American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine, 196(7), p. 873-881
Abstract: Rationale: Ambient air pollution, including black carbon, entails a serious public health risk because of its carcinogenic potential and as climate pollutant. To date, an internal exposure marker for black carbon particles that have cleared from the systemic circulation into the urine does not exist. Objectives: To develop and validate a novel method to measure black carbon particles in a label-free way in urine. Methods: We detected urinary carbon load in 289 children (aged 9–12 yr) using white-light generation under femtosecond pulsed laser illumination. Children’s residential black carbon concentrations were estimated based on a high-resolution spatial temporal interpolation method. Measurements and Main Results: We were able to detect urinary black carbon in all children, with an overall average (SD) of 98.2 × 105 (29.8 × 105) particles/ml. The urinary black carbon load was positively associated with medium-term to chronic (1 mo or more) residential black carbon exposure: +5.33 × 105 particles/ml higher carbon load (95% confidence interval, 1.56 × 105 to 9.10 × 105 particles/ml) for an interquartile range increment in annual residential black carbon exposure. Consistently, children who lived closer to a major road (≤160 m) had higher urinary black carbon load (6.93 × 105 particles/ml; 95% confidence interval, 0.77 × 105 to 13.1 × 105). Conclusions: Urinary black carbon mirrors the accumulation of medium-term to chronic exposure to combustion-related air pollution. This specific biomarker reflects internal systemic black carbon particles cleared from the circulation into the urine, allowing investigators to unravel the complexity of particulate-related health effects.
Keywords: urine; carbon load; biomarker; air pollution; black carbon
Document URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1942/25232
ISSN: 1073-449X
e-ISSN: 1535-4970
DOI: 10.1164/rccm.201704-0797OC
ISI #: 000412383800017
Rights: Copyright © 2017 by the American Thoracic Society
Category: A1
Type: Journal Contribution
Validations: ecoom 2018
Appears in Collections:Research publications

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