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Featured researches published by Marcos Abdo Arbex.


Environmental Health Perspectives | 2006

The Impact of Sugar Cane–Burning Emissions on the Respiratory System of Children and the Elderly

José Eduardo Delfini Cançado; Paulo Hilário Nascimento Saldiva; Luiz Alberto Amador Pereira; Luciene L. Lara; Paulo Artaxo; Luiz A. Martinelli; Marcos Abdo Arbex; Antonella Zanobetti; Alfésio Luís Ferreira Braga

We analyzed the influence of emissions from burning sugar cane on the respiratory system during almost 1 year in the city of Piracicaba in southeast Brazil. From April 1997 through March 1998, samples of inhalable particles were collected, separated into fine and coarse particulate mode, and analyzed for black carbon and tracer elements. At the same time, we examined daily records of children (< 13 years of age) and elderly people (> 64 years of age) admitted to the hospital because of respiratory diseases. Generalized linear models were adopted with natural cubic splines to control for season and linear terms to control for weather. Analyses were carried out for the entire period, as well as for burning and nonburning periods. Additional models were built using three factors obtained from factor analysis instead of particles or tracer elements. Increases of 10.2 μg/m3 in particles ≥ 2.5 μm/m3 aerodynamic diameter (PM2.5) and 42.9 μg/m3 in PM10 were associated with increases of 21.4% [95% confidence interval (CI), 4.3–38.5] and 31.03% (95% CI, 1.25–60.21) in child and elderly respiratory hospital admissions, respectively. When we compared periods, the effects during the burning period were much higher than the effects during nonburning period. Elements generated from sugar cane burning (factor 1) were those most associated with both child and elderly respiratory admissions. Our results show the adverse impact of sugar cane burning emissions on the health of the population, reinforcing the need for public efforts to reduce and eventually eliminate this source of air pollution.


Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health | 2007

Air pollution from biomass burning and asthma hospital admissions in a sugar cane plantation area in Brazil

Marcos Abdo Arbex; Lourdes Conceição Martins; Regiani Carvalho de Oliveira; Luiz Alberto Amador Pereira; Flávio Ferlin Arbex; José Eduardo Delfini Cançado; Paulo Hilário Nascimento Saldiva; Alfésio Luís Ferreira Braga

Objective: To evaluate the association between the total suspended particles (TSPs) generated from preharvest sugar cane burning and hospital admission due to asthma (asthma hospital admissions) in the city of Araraquara. Design: An ecological time-series study. Total daily records of asthma hospital admissions (ICD 10th J15) were obtained from one of the main hospitals in Araraquara, São Paulo State, Brazil, from 23 March 2003 to 27 July 2004. The daily concentration of TSP (μg/m3) was obtained using Handi-vol equipment (Energética, Brazil) placed in downtown Araraquara. The local airport provided the daily mean figures of temperature and humidity. The daily number of asthma hospital admissions was considered as the dependent variable in Poisson’s regression models and the daily concentration of TSP was considered the independent variable. The generalised linear model with natural cubic spline was adopted to control for long-time trend. Linear terms were used for weather variables. Results: TSP had an acute effect on asthma admissions, starting 1 day after TSP concentrations increased and remaining almost unchanged for the next four days. A 10 μg/m3 increase in the 5-day moving average (lag1–5) of TSP concentrations was associated with an increase of 11.6% (95% CI 5.4 to 17.7) in asthma hospital admissions. Conclusion: Increases in TSP concentrations were definitely associated with asthma hospital admissions in Araraquara and, despite using sugar cane alcohol to reduce air pollution from automotive sources in large Brazilian urban centres, the cities where sugar cane is harvested pay a high toll in terms of public health.


Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health | 2009

Urban air pollution and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease-related emergency department visits

Marcos Abdo Arbex; G M de Souza Conceição; Sônia Cendon; F F Arbex; Antonio Carlos Lopes; E P Moysés; S L Santiago; Paulo Hilário Nascimento Saldiva; Luiz Alberto Amador Pereira; Alfésio Luís Ferreira Braga

Background: Patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) can have recurrent disease exacerbations triggered by several factors, including air pollution. Visits to the emergency respiratory department can be a direct result of short-term exposure to air pollution. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between the daily number of COPD emergency department visits and the daily environmental air concentrations of PM10, SO2, NO2, CO and O3 in the City of São Paulo, Brazil. Methods: The sample data were collected between 2001 and 2003 and are categorised by gender and age. Generalised linear Poisson regression models were adopted to control for both short- and long-term seasonal changes as well as for temperature and relative humidity. The non-linear dependencies were controlled using a natural cubic spline function. Third-degree polynomial distributed lag models were adopted to estimate both lag structures and the cumulative effects of air pollutants. Results: PM10 and SO2 readings showed both acute and lagged effects on COPD emergency department visits. Interquartile range increases in their concentration (28.3 μg/m3 and 7.8 μg/m3, respectively) were associated with a cumulative 6-day increase of 19% and 16% in COPD admissions, respectively. An effect on women was observed at lag 0, and among the elderly the lag period was noted to be longer. Increases in CO concentration showed impacts in the female and elderly groups. NO2 and O3 presented mild effects on the elderly and in women, respectively. Conclusion: These results indicate that air pollution affects health in a gender- and age-specific manner and should be considered a relevant risk factor that exacerbates COPD in urban environments.


Journal of The Air & Waste Management Association | 2000

Assessment of the Effects of Sugar Cane Plantation Burning on Daily Counts of Inhalation Therapy

Marcos Abdo Arbex; György Miklós Böhm; Paulo Hilário Nascimento Saldiva; Gleice Margarete de Souza Conceição; Arden Pope; Alfésio Luís Ferreira Braga

ABSTRACT This study was designed to evaluate the association between sugar cane plantation burning and hospital visits in Araraquara in the state of São Paulo, Brazil. From June 1 to August 31, 1995, the daily number of visits of patients who needed inhalation therapy in one of the main hospitals of the city was recorded and used as health impairment estimation. Sedimentation of particle mass (the amount of particles deposited on four containers filled with water) was measured daily. The association between the weight of the sediment and the number of visits was evaluated by means of Poisson regression models controlled for seasonality, temperature, day of the week, and rain. We found a significant and dose-dependent relationship between the number of visits and the amount of sediment. The relative risk of visit associated with an increase of 10 mg in the sediment weight was 1.09 (1-1.19), and the relative risk of an inhalation therapy was 1.20 (1.03-1.39) on the most polluted days (fourth quartile of sediment mass). These results indicate that sugar cane burning may cause deleterious health effects in the exposed population.


Jornal Brasileiro De Pneumologia | 2004

Queima de biomassa e efeitos sobre a saúde

Marcos Abdo Arbex; José Eduardo Delfini Cançado; Luiz Alberto Amador Pereira; Alfésio Luís Ferreira Braga; Paulo Hilário Nascimento Saldiva

A primeira ideia que se forma na mente das pessoas e do pesquisador e associar a poluicao do ar aos grandes centros urbanos, com a imagem de poluentes sendo eliminados por veiculos automotores ou pela chamine de suas fabricas. Entretanto, uma parcela consideravel da populacao do planeta convive com uma outra fonte de poluicao, que atinge preferencialmente os paises em desenvolvimento: a queima de biomassa. Este artigo tem como objetivo chamar a atencao do pneumologista, da comunidade e das autoridades para os riscos a saude da populacao exposta a essa fonte geradora de poluentes, seja em ambientes internos, seja em ambientes abertos. O presente trabalho caracteriza as principais condicoes que levam a combustao de biomassa, como a literatura tem registrado os seus efeitos sobre a saude humana, discutindo os mecanismos fisiopatologicos envolvidos, e finaliza com a apresentacao de dois estudos recentes que enfatizam a importância da queima de um tipo especifico de biomassa, a palha da cana-de-acucar, pratica comum no interior do Brasil, e sua interferencia no perfil de morbidade respiratoria da populacao exposta.


Jornal Brasileiro De Pneumologia | 2006

Repercussões clínicas da exposição à poluição atmosférica

José Eduardo Delfini Cançado; Alfésio Luís Ferreira Braga; Luiz Alberto Amador Pereira; Marcos Abdo Arbex; Paulo Hilário Nascimento Saldiva; Ubiratan de Paula Santos

Atmospheric pollution is a topic of extensive discussion the world over. The clinical repercussions of exposure to the principal atmospheric pollutants are summarized herein. According to the American Environmental Protection Agency, air quality standards for these agents are set based on their primary and half-life values. The respiratory effects of the burning of fossil fuels and biomass are succinctly presented, with a special focus on alerting health care professionals of the increased morbidity related to environmental pollution.


Jornal Brasileiro De Pneumologia | 2012

A poluição do ar e o sistema respiratório

Marcos Abdo Arbex; Ubiratan de Paula Santos; Lourdes Conceição Martins; Paulo Hilário Nascimento Saldiva; Luiz Alberto Amador Pereira; Alfésio Luís Ferreira Braga

A poluicao atmosferica encontra-se presente nos mais diferentes cenarios ao longo dos ultimos 250 anos, desde que a Revolucao Industrial acelerou o processo de emissao de poluentes que, ate entao, estava limitado ao uso domestico de combustiveis vegetais e minerais e as emissoes vulcânicas intermitentes. Hoje, aproximadamente 50% da populacao do planeta vivem em cidades e aglomerados urbanos e estao expostas a niveis progressivamente maiores de poluentes do ar. Este estudo e uma revisao nao sistematica sobre os diferentes tipos e fontes de poluentes do ar e os efeitos respiratorios atribuidos a exposicao a esses contaminantes. Podem ser creditados aos poluentes particulados e gasosos, emitidos por diferentes fontes, aumentos nos sintomas de doencas, na procura por atendimentos em servicos de emergencia e no numero de internacoes e de obitos. Mais do que descompensar doencas pre-existentes, exposicoes cronicas tem ajudado a aumentar o numero de casos novos de asma, de DPOC e de câncer de pulmao, tanto em areas urbanas quanto em areas rurais, fazendo com que os poluentes atmosfericos rivalizem com a fumaca do tabaco pelo papel de principal fator de risco para estas doencas. Na rotina de clinicos e pneumologistas, esperamos contribuir para consolidar a importância da investigacao sobre a exposicao aos poluentes do ar e o reconhecimento de que esse fator de risco merece ser levado em conta na adocao da melhor terapeutica para o controle das descompensacoes agudas das doencas respiratorias e para a sua manutencao entre as crises.Over the past 250 years-since the Industrial Revolution accelerated the process of pollutant emission, which, until then, had been limited to the domestic use of fuels (mineral and vegetal) and intermittent volcanic emissions-air pollution has been present in various scenarios. Today, approximately 50% of the people in the world live in cities and urban areas and are exposed to progressively higher levels of air pollutants. This is a non-systematic review on the different types and sources of air pollutants, as well as on the respiratory effects attributed to exposure to such contaminants. Aggravation of the symptoms of disease, together with increases in the demand for emergency treatment, the number of hospitalizations, and the number of deaths, can be attributed to particulate and gaseous pollutants, emitted by various sources. Chronic exposure to air pollutants not only causes decompensation of pre-existing diseases but also increases the number of new cases of asthma, COPD, and lung cancer, even in rural areas. Air pollutants now rival tobacco smoke as the leading risk factor for these diseases. We hope that we can impress upon pulmonologists and clinicians the relevance of investigating exposure to air pollutants and of recognizing this as a risk factor that should be taken into account in the adoption of best practices for the control of the acute decompensation of respiratory diseases and for maintenance treatment between exacerbations.


Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health | 2010

Impact of outdoor biomass air pollution on hypertension hospital admissions

Marcos Abdo Arbex; Paulo Hilário Nascimento Saldiva; Luiz Alberto Amador Pereira; Alfésio Luís Ferreira Braga

Background This study aimed to evaluate the association between the total suspended particles (TSP) generated from burning sugar cane plantations and the incidence of hospital admissions from hypertension in the city of Araraquara. Methods The study was an ecological time-series study. Total daily records of hypertension (ICD 10th I10-15) were obtained from admitted patients of all ages in a hospital in Araraquara, São Paulo State, Brazil, from 23 March 2003 to 27 July 2004. The daily concentration of TSP (μg/m3) was obtained using a Handi-Vol sampler placed in downtown Araraquara. The local airport provided daily measures of temperature and humidity. In generalised linear Poisson regression models, the daily number of hospital admissions for hypertension was considered to be the dependent variable and the daily TSP concentration the independent variable. Results TSP presented a lagged effect on hypertension admissions, which was first observed 1 day after a TSP increase and remained almost unchanged for the following 2 days. A 10 μg/m3 increase in the TSP 3 day moving average lagged in 1 day led to an increase in hypertension-related hospital admissions during the harvest period (12.5%, 95% CI 5.6% to 19.9%) that was almost 30% higher than during non-harvest periods (9.0%, 95% CI 4.0% to 14.3%). Conclusions Increases in TSP concentrations were associated with hypertension-related hospital admissions. Despite the benefits of reduced air pollution in urban cities achieved by using ethanol produced from sugar cane to power automobiles, areas where the sugar cane is produced and harvested were found to have increased public health risk.


Science of The Total Environment | 2012

Burnt sugarcane harvesting: Particulate matter exposure and the effects on lung function, oxidative stress, and urinary 1-hydroxypyrene

Gustavo Faibischew Prado; Dirce Maria Trevisan Zanetta; Marcos Abdo Arbex; Alfésio Luís Ferreira Braga; Luiz Alberto Amador Pereira; Mary Rosa Rodrigues de Marchi; Ana Paula de Melo Loureiro; Tânia Marcourakis; Lucy Elaine Sugauara; Gilka Jorge Figaro Gattás; Fernanda de Toledo Gonçalves; João Marcos Salge; Mario Terra-Filho; Ubiratan de Paula Santos

Non-mechanised sugarcane harvesting preceded by burning exposes workers and the people of neighbouring towns to high concentrations of pollutants. This study was aimed to evaluate the respiratory symptoms, lung function and oxidative stress markers in sugarcane workers and the residents of Mendonça, an agricultural town in Brazil, during the non-harvesting and harvesting periods and to assess the population and individual exposures to fine particulate matter (PM(2.5)). Sugarcane workers and healthy volunteers were evaluated with two respiratory symptom questionnaires, spirometry, urinary 1-hydroxypyrene levels, and the measurement of antioxidant enzymes and plasma malonaldehyde during the non-harvesting and harvesting periods. The environmental assessment was determined from PM(2.5) concentration. PM(2.5) level increased from 8 μg/m³ during the non-harvesting period to 23.5 μg/m³ in the town and 61 μg/m³ on the plantations during the harvesting period. Wheezing, coughing, sneezing, and breathlessness increased significantly in both groups during the harvesting period, but more markedly in workers. A decrease in lung function and antioxidant enzyme activity was observed in both populations during harvesting; this decrease was greater among the sugarcane workers. The urinary 1-hydroxypyrene levels only increased in the sugarcane workers during the harvesting period. The malonaldehyde levels were elevated in both groups, with a higher increase observed in the workers. This research demonstrates the exposure of sugarcane workers and the inhabitants of a neighbouring town to high PM(2.5) concentrations during the sugarcane harvest period. This exposure was higher among the sugarcane workers, as illustrated by both higher PM(2.5) concentrations in the sugarcane fields and higher urinary 1-hydroxypyrene levels in the volunteers in this group. The higher incidence of respiratory symptoms, greater decrease in lung function and more marked elevation of oxidative stress markers among the sugarcane workers during the harvest confirms the greater effect magnitude in this population and a dose-dependent relationship between pollution and the observed effects.


Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research | 2007

Indoor NO2 air pollution and lung function of professional cooks

Marcos Abdo Arbex; Lourdes Conceição Martins; Luiz Alberto Amador Pereira; F. Negrini; Arnaldo Alves Cardoso; Wanessa R. Melchert; R. F. Arbex; Paulo Hilário Nascimento Saldiva; Antonella Zanobetti; Alfésio Luís Ferreira Braga

Studies of cooking-generated NO2 effects are rare in occupational epidemiology. In the present study, we evaluated the lung function of professional cooks exposed to NO2 in hospital kitchens. We performed spirometry in 37 cooks working in four hospital kitchens and estimated the predicted FVC, FEV1 and FEF(25-75), based on age, sex, race, weight, and height, according to Knudson standards. NO2 measurements were obtained for 4 consecutive days during 4 different periods at 20-day intervals in each kitchen. Measurements were performed inside and outside the kitchens, simultaneously using Palm diffusion tubes. A time/exposure indicator was defined as representative of the cumulative exposure of each cook. No statistically significant effect of NO2 exposure on FVC was found. Each year of work as a cook corresponded to a decrease in predicted FEV1 of 2.5% (P = 0.046) for the group as a whole. When smoking status and asthma were included in the analysis the effect of time/exposure decreased about 10% and lost statistical significance. On predicted FEF(25-75), a decrease of 3.5% (P = 0.035) was observed for the same group and the inclusion of controllers for smoking status and asthma did not affect the effects of time/exposure on pulmonary function parameter. After a 10-year period of work as cooks the participants of the study may present decreases in both predicted FEV1 and FEF(25-75) that can reach 20 and 30%, respectively. The present study showed small but statistically significant adverse effects of gas stove exposure on the lung function of professional cooks.

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Lia D'Ambrosio

World Health Organization

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Mina Gaga

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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