Activity patterns in elementary and high school students exposed to oxidant pollution

Spier, CE; Little, DE; Trim, SC; Johnson, TR; Linn, WS; Hackney, JD

HERO ID

12262

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

1992

Language

English

PMID

1422159

HERO ID 12262
In Press No
Year 1992
Title Activity patterns in elementary and high school students exposed to oxidant pollution
Authors Spier, CE; Little, DE; Trim, SC; Johnson, TR; Linn, WS; Hackney, JD
Journal Journal of Exposure Analysis and Environmental Epidemiology
Volume 2
Issue 3
Page Numbers 277-293
Abstract We investigated activity patterns of 17 elementary school students aged 10-12, and 19 high school students aged 13-17, in suburban Los Angeles during the oxidant pollution season. Individuals' relationships between ventilation rate (VR) and heart rate (HR) were "calibrated" in supervised outdoor walking/jogging. Log VR was consistently proportional to HR; although "calibrations" were limited by a restricted range of exercise, and possibly by artifact due to mouthpiece breathing, which may cause overestimation of VR at rest. Each subject then recorded activities in diaries, and recorded HR once per minute by wearing Heart Watches, over 3 days (Saturday-Monday). For each activity the subject estimated a breathing rate--slow (like slow walking), medium (like fast walking), or fast (like running). VR ranges for each breathing rate and activity type were estimated from HR recordings. High-school students' diaries showed their aggregate distribution of waking hours as 68% slow inside, 8% slow outside, 10% medium inside, 9% medium outside, 1.5% fast inside, 1.5% fast outside. Elementary students' distribution was 47% slow inside, 15% slow outside, 20% medium inside, 12% medium outside, 2.5% fast inside, 3.5% fast outside. Sleep occupied 38% of high-school students' and 40% of elementary students' time; HR were generally lower in sleep than in slow waking activity. High school students' mean VR estimates were 13 L/min for slow breathing, 18 for medium, and 23 for fast; elementary students' were 14 slow, 18 medium, and 19 fast. VR distributions were approximately lognormal. Maximum estimated VR were approximately 70 L/min in elementary and approximately 100 L/min in high school students. Compared to adults studied similarly, students reported more medium or fast breathing, and had equal or higher VR estimates during slow and medium breathing despite their smaller size. These results suggest that, relative to body size, young people inhale larger doses of outdoor air pollutants than adults.
Pmid 1422159
Wosid WOS:A1992JV01700002
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword air pollution; exposure assessment; activity patterns; heart rate