Nonlinearity in human health response to ozone: Experimental laboratory considerations
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文摘
Results from controlled laboratory exposures of human volunteers indicate that higher ozone (O<sub>3sub>) hourly average concentrations elicit a greater effect on hour-by-hour physiologic response (i.e., forced expiratory volume in 1 s [FEV<sub>1sub>]) than lower hourly average values, which implies a nonlinear dose–response relationship. The current 8-h average human-health O<sub>3sub> standard is not adequate for describing this nonlinear FEV<sub>1sub> hour-by-hour pattern of response. Consequently, it is recommended that physiologically consistent sigmoidally shaped dose–response models based on controlled human laboratory data be integrated into the air quality standard-setting process. The sigmoidally shaped model is continuous, does not require the identification of a population threshold concentration, and deals with plateau considerations at the high end of the distribution of exposures. For developing a consistent standard to protect human health, it is important to identify those ambient-type concentration patterns that elicit adverse human health effects. Such a standard should be ultimately based not only on spirometric response but other potentially important health impairment endpoints. Because of the paucity of experimental results that utilize ambient-type concentration regimes, additional studies are needed to create a database that uses realistic ambient-type exposures (i.e., variable concentration regimes) for human laboratory studies. The ambient-type concentration patterns that elicit an adverse health effect can be subsequently integrated into a form and level of a protective standard.
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