A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Neurobehavioral performance in adolescents is inversely associated with traffic exposure
On the basis of animal research and epidemiological studies in children and elderly there is a growing concern that traffic exposure may affect the brain. The aim of our study was to investigate the association between traffic exposure and neurobehavioral performance in adolescents. We examined 606 adolescents. To model the exposure, we constructed a traffic exposure factor based on a biomarker of benzene (urinary trans,trans-muconic acid) and the amount of contact with traffic preceding the neurobehavioral examination (using distance-weighted traffic density and time spent in traffic). We used a Bayesian structural equation model to investigate the association between traffic exposure and three neurobehavioral domains: sustained attention, short-term memory, and manual motor speed. A one standard deviation increase in traffic exposure was associated with a 026 standard deviation decrease in sustained attention (95% credible interval: -0.02 to -0.51), adjusting for gender, age, smoking, passive smoking, level of education of the mother, socioeconomic status, time of the day, and day of the week. The associations between traffic exposure and the other neurobehavioral domains studied had the same direction but did not reach the level of statistical significance. The results remained consistent in the sensitivity analysis excluding smokers and passive smokers. The inverse association between sustained attention and traffic exposure was independent of the blood lead level. Our study in adolescents supports the recent findings in children and elderly suggesting that traffic exposure adversely affects the neurobehavioral function. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. The study was commissioned, financed and steered by the Ministry of the Flemish Community (Department of Economics, Science and Innovation; Flemish Agency for Care and Health; and Department of Environment, Nature and Energy) and co-financed by FWO (G.0.873.11.N.10) and European Research Council (ERC-2012-StG 310898). Michal Kicinski and Isabelle Sioen have respectively, a PhD and postdoctoral fellowship of the Research Foundation Flanders (FWO). adolescents; air pollution; cognition; neurobehavioral effects; traffic
Neurobehavioral performance in adolescents is inversely associated with traffic exposure
On the basis of animal research and epidemiological studies in children and elderly there is a growing concern that traffic exposure may affect the brain. The aim of our study was to investigate the association between traffic exposure and neurobehavioral performance in adolescents. We examined 606 adolescents. To model the exposure, we constructed a traffic exposure factor based on a biomarker of benzene (urinary trans,trans-muconic acid) and the amount of contact with traffic preceding the neurobehavioral examination (using distance-weighted traffic density and time spent in traffic). We used a Bayesian structural equation model to investigate the association between traffic exposure and three neurobehavioral domains: sustained attention, short-term memory, and manual motor speed. A one standard deviation increase in traffic exposure was associated with a 026 standard deviation decrease in sustained attention (95% credible interval: -0.02 to -0.51), adjusting for gender, age, smoking, passive smoking, level of education of the mother, socioeconomic status, time of the day, and day of the week. The associations between traffic exposure and the other neurobehavioral domains studied had the same direction but did not reach the level of statistical significance. The results remained consistent in the sensitivity analysis excluding smokers and passive smokers. The inverse association between sustained attention and traffic exposure was independent of the blood lead level. Our study in adolescents supports the recent findings in children and elderly suggesting that traffic exposure adversely affects the neurobehavioral function. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. The study was commissioned, financed and steered by the Ministry of the Flemish Community (Department of Economics, Science and Innovation; Flemish Agency for Care and Health; and Department of Environment, Nature and Energy) and co-financed by FWO (G.0.873.11.N.10) and European Research Council (ERC-2012-StG 310898). Michal Kicinski and Isabelle Sioen have respectively, a PhD and postdoctoral fellowship of the Research Foundation Flanders (FWO). adolescents; air pollution; cognition; neurobehavioral effects; traffic
Neurobehavioral performance in adolescents is inversely associated with traffic exposure
2015
Article (Journal)
English
BKL:
30.00
Naturwissenschaften allgemein: Allgemeines
Neurobehavioral performance in adolescents is inversely associated with traffic exposure
Online Contents | 2015
|Neurobehavioral Alterations in Occupational Noise Exposure: A Systematic Review
DOAJ | 2021
|Prenatal exposure to arsenic and neurobehavioral development of newborns in China
DOAJ | 2018
|Exposure to multiple pesticides and neurobehavioral outcomes among smallholder farmers in Uganda
DOAJ | 2021
|