Search
110-S4
Table of Contents
EHPS Archives
Publications
Subscribe
|
Environmental
Health Perspectives Supplements Volume 110, Number 4, August 2002
Testing the Metals Hypothesis in Spokane, Washington
Candis S. Claiborn,1 Timothy Larson,2 and
Lianne Sheppard3
1Laboratory for Atmospheric Research and Department of Civil
and Environmental Engineering, Washington State University, Pullman,
Washington, USA; 2Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
and 3Departments of Biostatistics and Environmental Health,
University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA
|
|
Full Article in PDF
|
Abstract
A 7-year, time-series, epidemiologic study is ongoing in Spokane, Washington,
to examine the associations between ambient particulate constituents or
sources and health outcomes such as emergency department (ED) visits for
asthma or respiratory problems. One of the hypotheses being tested is
that particulate toxic metals are associated with these health outcomes.
Spokane is a desirable city in which to conduct this study because of
its relatively high concentrations of particulate matter, low concentrations
of potentially confounding air pollutants, variability of particulate
sources, and presence of several potential particulate metals sources.
Daily fine- and coarse-fraction particulate samples are analyzed for metals
via energy-dispersive X-ray fluorescence (EDXRF) and instrumental neutron
activation analysis. Particulate sources are determined using receptor
modeling, including chemical mass balancing and positive matrix factorization
coupled with partial source contribution function analysis. Principal
component analysis has also been used to examine the influence of sources
on the daily variability of the chemical composition of particulate samples.
Based upon initial analyses using the EDXRF elemental analyses, statistically
significant associations were observed between ED visits for asthma and
increased combustion products, air stagnation, and fine particulate Zn.
Although there is a significant soil particulate component, increased
crustal particulate levels were not found to be associated with ED visits
for asthma. Further research will clarify whether there is an association
between specific health outcomes and either coarse or fine particulate
metal species. Key words: aerosols, asthma, health effects, particulate
matter, PM10, PM2.5, positive matrix factorization,
receptor modeling, source apportionment. Environ Health Perspect 110(suppl
4):547-552 (2002).
http://ehpnet1.niehs.nih.gov/docs/2002/suppl-4/547-552claiborn/abstract.html
This article is part of the monograph Environmental
Air Toxics: Role in Asthma Occurrence?
Address correspondence to C. Claiborn, Laboratory for
Atmospheric Research, Dept. of Civil and Environmental Engineering,
101 Sloan, Washington State University, Pullman, WA 99164-2910 USA.
Telephone: (509) 335-5055. Fax: (509) 335-7632. E-mail: claiborn@wsu.edu
We are grateful for the contributions of J. Koenig,
C. Slaughter, and E. Kim at the University of Washington and M. Hoffman
and D. Finn at Washington State University. Support from the U.S. EPA,
especially from R. Zweidinger, J. Lewtas, and M. Johnston, is greatly
appreciated. Cooperation from the Washington State Department of Ecology
and the Spokane County Air Pollution Control Authority, especially from
R. Edgar, was of special importance to the success of this project.
This work was funded by grants from the Mickey Leland National Urban
Air Toxics Research Center and from the U.S. EPA. Neither agency has
reviewed this article, and the views expressed herein do not necessarily
reflect the views of either agency. Additional support was provided
from the U.S. EPA Northwest Research Center for Particulate Air Pollution
and Health. Mention of trade names does not constitute an endorsement.
Received 19 November 2001; accepted 1 April 2002.
|
Introduction
In response to new epidemiologic information regarding the associations between
exposure to atmospheric particulate matter (PM) and increased health risks,
including both mortality and morbidity, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
(U.S. EPA) recently adopted new ambient air quality standards for particulate
matter with a mass median aerodynamic diameter less than 2.5 µm (PM2.5).
Even so, many questions remain regarding the mechanism(s) responsible for the
adverse health effects associated with exposure to PM, and the causative components
of PM. In 1998 the National Research Council (NRC) was given the tasks of identifying
the most important research priorities and monitoring research progress toward
improved understanding of the associations between mortality or morbidity and
atmospheric PM (1). Included in the research priorities is identification
of the roles of specific constituents of PM mixtures. The constituents hypothesized
to play a role in adverse health effects associated with PM include particles
of certain sizes (e.g., fine vs. coarse particles), high numbers of particles
(i.e., the ultrafine particles present in very large numbers but that do not
contribute significantly to the total particulate mass), and specific classes
of chemicals, including, but not limited to, organic species, soot, acid aerosols,
and transition metals. It is generally thought that the more important PM constituents
from a health standpoint are those that are anthropogenic (man-made) and that
fall into the fine particulate size range (2), but the role of coarse
PM in observed health effects has not been ruled out. On the one hand, the general
consistency among epidemiologic studies across a number of cities may suggest
that the particulate mass concentration is responsible for observed health effects
(3). On the other hand, estimated relative risks vary considerably from
one place to another, and this variation may be due to differences in toxicity
of PM that arise from differences in chemical and size characteristics (1).
PM2.5 includes a mixture of combustion aerosols, secondary products,
and crustal components (i.e., generated from mechanical grinding of geologic
materials, including dust from paved and unpaved roads, unpaved parking lots,
agricultural operations, and windblown dust). Briefly, it is not known whether
the fine particulate mass (PM2.5) is the most appropriate indicator
for particles (or other air pollutants) that present the health risks currently
linked to PM, or whether certain components of the fine particle mass are differentially
more toxic.
One hypothesis that the NRC is interested in examining is the possible role
of particulate transition metals in particulate toxicity. This hypothesis arises
because a number of toxicologic studies have shown that many transition metals
have cytotoxic and inflammatory properties [see Lighty et al. (4) and
references therein]. Toxicologic studies that examined the effects of inhalation
exposure to metals found that the respiratory tract was a major target for the
toxicity [e.g., Kelleher et al. (5)]. Human health effects resulting
from acute occupational exposure have included respiratory tract irritation,
bronchitis, rhinitis, impaired lung function, emphysema, and asthma, depending
upon the metal and the level of exposure (6). Beyond occupational exposure
and laboratory animal exposure studies, however, few studies examine the metals
hypothesis for explaining the association between observed health outcomes and
ambient PM exposures. In a recent study conducted on human airway epithelial
cells (7), extracts of total PM collected in Provo, Utah, generated biological
responses that could be replicated by culturing cells with quantities of Cu2+
comparable with those found in Provo extracts. The authors then hypothesized
that Cu ions are responsible for the sensitivity of asthmatic individuals to
Provo PM that has been previously reported in epidemiologic studies [e.g., Pope
(8,9)].
Sources of particulate metals include industrial point sources (e.g., mineral
processing), dusts, and combustion processes such as those found in Spokane,
Washington. Ambient PM in Spokane is unique in that it has a large crustal component
as well as high levels of particulate combustion products. This airshed then
provides an opportunity to sort out the effects of fine particulate mass as
well as specific particulate components, including metals, combustion products,
and crustal materials. Spokane is a semiarid, western city with a medium-sized
urban population of approximately 200,000, and over 400,000 who live in the
Spokane Valley. The area experiences periodic violations of the air quality
standards for particulate matter with a mass median aerodynamic diameter less
than 10 µm (PM10) and is currently classified as a nonattainment
area for PM10. There are several particulate "seasons" that lead
to greatly differing particulate chemical characteristics and concentrations
(10). In the winter, the Spokane Valley is prone to inversions, and in
addition to vehicular exhaust, residential wood burning contributes significantly
to particulate pollution. In the fall, prescribed agricultural burning of myriad
acres of bluegrass seed and wheat stubble fields takes place. In the late summer,
during hot, dry periods, Spokane experiences high PM10 because of
re-entrainment of dust from unpaved roads and parking lots, and during windy
periods, windblown dust storms may occur (11). In contrast to many urban
areas in the Eastern United States, the sulfur dioxide (SO2) concentration,
the fraction of secondary PM mass (including both sulfates and nitrates), and
the level of particulate acidity are relatively low in Spokane PM (12).
Major point sources of particulate pollution include a municipal waste incinerator
and an aluminum smelter and there are several smaller potential particulate
metal sources from metals processors and electronics manufacturing. The major
point sources are on the outskirts of town, with the incinerator located southwest
of the city and the aluminum smelter located to the northeast.
Toxic or transition metals potentially of concern in Spokane could include
those that would derive from anthropogenic sources, such as oil-fired generating
stations that would emit V, Fe, Zn, Pb, Cu, As, Co, Cr, Mn, and Sb. The municipal
waste incinerator in Spokane would be expected to be a potential source of Zn,
Fe, Hg, and Pb, in particular, with trace amounts of some of the other metals.
The aluminum smelter, and other smaller metal processing facilities, would be
sources of particulate metals, including Cu, Mn, Zn, and Cr. Natural crustal
sources are also sources of many metals, such as (in order of decreasing abundances)
Fe, Mn, Zn, Pb, V, Cr, Ni, Cu, Co, Hg, Cd, and possibly As from agricultural
soils treated with pesticides. Many of these metals have already been detected
via energy-dispersive X-ray fluorescence (EDXRF) in at least some of the Spokane
particulate samples, including As, Cd, Cr, Co, Pb, Mn, Hg, V, and soluble Fe
(via inductively coupled plasma emission spectroscopy). As a final note, during
the course of this study in Spokane, because of union labor strikes and high
energy costs that have enabled the aluminum smelter to sell its energy allotment
at a profit over actual aluminum production, the aluminum smelter was temporarily
shut down in mid-December 2000 and remains shut down as of May 2002.
The implication of these sources of PM in a city classified as nonattainment
for PM10 is that it is possible to examine associations between adverse
human health effects and primary PM chemical constituents without some of the
major confounding species (ozone, acids, sulfates, nitrates) present in high
concentrations. These are described in the following sections [see also Norris
et al. (13)]. Moreover, it is possible, in the Spokane data, to isolate
effects associated with exposure to ambient PM from combustion sources from
those associated with PM from other sources.
Spokane study. An extensive epidemiologic study examining the
associations between health outcomes and specific chemical constituents of PM
is currently being conducted in Spokane, with daily PM2.5 as well
as coarse-fraction PM [between 2.5 and ~8 µm in diameter (PM8-2.5)]
having been collected and chemically characterized from January 1995 to 15 May
2002. In Spokane, SO2 concentrations are trivial, so confounding
by this co-pollutant is not a factor.
Spokane was the location of a previous epidemiology study (14) in which
the associations between short-term changes in air pollution and hospital admissions
for pneumonia and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) were examined.
That study found that the magnitude of the PM10 effect was similar
to that reported for other locations in the eastern United States and in Europe
that would be subject to confounding by weather and by other co-pollutants such
as SO2.
In summary, Spokane represents a suitable city in which to conduct an epidemiologic
study on airborne PM and its associations with health effects, because of relatively
high particulate levels; low levels of confounding air pollutants, including
ozone, SO2, acids, sulfates, and nitrates; good variability of particulate
sources; and the medium size of the catchment area (400,000 persons). The shutdown
of the aluminum smelter may also represent an unusual opportunity to examine
the relationship between health outcomes and this specific source of particulate
pollution.
The overall goal of the Spokane studies has been to examine the relationship
between certain health outcomes and components of particulate pollution. The
objective of the ongoing study in Spokane is specifically to test the hypothesis
that health effects are associated with atmospheric particulate transition metals
species. The approach is a long-term (>7 years), time-series, epidemiologic
study. Specific health outcomes of interest include asthma and respiratory emergency
department (ED) visits and admissions for asthma and respiratory problems (including
pneumonia, COPD, acute upper respiratory tract infections not including colds,
and pediatric and adult asthma) and hospital admissions for respiratory or cardiovascular
events. A secondary objective is to examine associations between specific source
contributions of PM in Spokane and health outcomes. We realize that different
health outcomes will not necessarily have the same mechanism for causation attributed
to air pollution components. In this article we outline the methods for the
overall study, then focus on asthma and summarize the findings to date from
these studies conducted in Spokane, as well as discuss the intended future analyses.
Materials and Methods
Data Collection
Since 1995, daily fine (PM2.5) and coarse (PM8-2.5)
particle samples have been collected at a central monitoring site in Spokane.
Samples have been collected using the Versatile Air Pollutant Sampler (VAPS,
URG Corp., Carrboro, NC, USA), a dichotomous type of sampler that splits the
fine-fraction flow into two streams, thus allowing two separate fine-fraction
samples to be collected, along with one coarse-fraction sample. Fine particulate
samples have been chemically characterized for a variety of species, including
elemental carbon (EC) and organic carbon (OC) via thermal manganese oxidation
and the thermal optical transmission analysis based upon National Institute
for Occupational Safety and Health method 5040 (15), ionic species sulfate
and nitrate via ion chromatography and ammonium via automated colorimetry, >40
elements via EDXRF, and additional elements and metals via instrumental neutron
activation analysis (INAA). Coarse particulate samples have also been analyzed
via EDXRF and INAA. Metals of interest for the present study include several
detected by EDXRF (Mn, Cd, Ni, Pb, Hg, V, Ti, Zn, and Fe), and several detected
by INAA (As, Co, Cr, Sb, and Se as well as Fe and Zn). In addition to the 24-hr
integrated particulate samples, continuous PM10, PM2.5,
and PM1 have been measured using tapered element oscillating microbalance
technology (TEOM; Rupprecht and Patashnik Inc., Albany, NY, USA). Supporting
measurements also include hourly wind speed, wind direction, ambient pressure
and temperature, and carbon monoxide and SO2 levels. Ozone is also
measured regularly in Spokane during the ozone season but not at the same monitoring
site. NO2 has been measured periodically in Spokane and is currently
measured at the same site. Averaged 3-hr relative humidity data are available
from the Spokane International Airport.
Health data have also been collected since 1994, and health outcome measures
include ED visits and admissions (both childhood and nonelderly) at the four
Spokane hospitals for asthma and respiratory problems including COPD, pneumonia,
bronchitis, and upper respiratory infections but not including colds or sinusitis;
hospital admissions (both childhood and nonelderly) for respiratory events;
and total respiratory mortality. Gastroenteritis is used as a control.
Statistical Methods
Statistical approaches include standard ecologic time-series Poisson regression
using a generalized additive model. Smoothing for time, day of week, and weather
is performed. Single or multiple pollutants are used as linear terms for exposures,
and short-term (e.g., 0-, 1-, 2-, and 3-day) lags are tested. Associations tested
to date have included those between both nonelderly (defined as younger than
65 years) and childhood (younger than 18 years) ED visits for asthma and regularly
monitored U.S. EPA criteria air pollutants, as well as PM size fraction and
chemical composition (12). In the statistical analyses yet to be conducted,
various transition metals will be tested directly, as well as source contributions
from a source apportionment model. Also, outcomes to be tested will eventually
include total respiratory hospital admissions and mortality.
Receptor Modeling
The influence of sources on the daily variability of the chemical data obtained
from the elemental analyses, as well as the other chemical measurements, has
been examined using principal component analysis (PCA) (12,13), and positive
matrix factorization combined with partial source contribution function analysis
(PMF/PSCF) (16). Current source apportionment studies use the chemical
mass balance (CMB) method (17). PCA and PMF use the ambient measurements
taken at the receptor site to identify the sources, rather than taking selected
chemical profiles of sources from a source library, as is required for CMB.
In other words, in PCA and PMF, it is not necessary to identify the sources
a priori, but rather it is possible to extract them as multivariate features
that underlie the measurements. PCA and PMF differ from each other in the criteria
they use to extract the source features. PCA attempts to capture the maximum
amount of variation in the data set, whereas PMF tries to solve the mass balance
equation with positive constraints on the mass contributions. PMF also accounts
for the uncertainty in each data point as opposed to the overall uncertainty
of the fitted model (18). In summary, the PCA and PMF features are not
the same. The Spokane data have been analyzed via both these techniques as well
as by CMB.
Results
PM Climatology in Spokane
|
Table 1
|
Table 1 shows the range of conditions for various meteorologic and pollution
measurements in Spokane for the period of January 1995 through 1997. Figure
1 shows a summary of the fraction of particulate samples collected from January
1995 through December 1997, with levels of selected elements and metals of interest
above their detection limits for EDXRF and INAA. These two methods are complementary,
with EDXRF detecting a higher percentage of Mn, Hg, Cd, Ti, and V on Spokane
samples; INAA detecting a higher percentage of Cr, Co, As, and Sb on Spokane
samples; and both methods detecting comparable percentages in Spokane for Zn,
Fe, Ni, and Se.
|

Figure 1. Comparison of EDXRF
and INAA data for 698 ambient, fine particulate samples collected in Spokane
from January 1996 through December 1997. Bars indicate the fraction of
samples with amounts of indicated metals above the detection limit for
each method.
|
To determine whether the metals concentrations will be intercorrelated, multivariate
methods were applied to the EDXRF data that have been collected. Table 2 shows
correlation coefficients for the various metals detected by EDXRF, along with
some other particulate characteristics. Ti, Fe, and Mn are significantly correlated
to reconstructed fine soil, with correlation coefficients greater than 0.90.
There appear to be small but possibly significant correlations between vanadium
and titanium (r = 0.36), and between vanadium and chromium (r
= 0.42). Of the rest of the toxic metals of interest, it appears that only lead
is correlated to other characteristics of atmospheric PM, with correlation coefficients
for PM8, PM2.5, and OC greater than 0.30.
Although the data in Table 2 suggest that the various metals are not intercorrelated,
this might be expected to some extent because of the low concentrations of metals
species in fine PM. The incorporation of INAA along with EDXRF analysis provides
better resolution for certain metal species such as As, Cr, Co, Se, and Sb (Figure
1) (17).
|
Table 2
|
Receptor Analyses: PCA
To examine the major sources of variability in PM2.5 composition
in Spokane, Norris (12) included several daily meteorologic indices in
a PCA. A stagnation index was characterized by the number of hours during which
stagnant conditions (i.e., hourly wind speed < 50th percentile
value of the hourly wind speeds) existed. A "cold and foggy" index was characterized
by cool temperatures and high relative humidity (i.e., reported foggy conditions,
corresponding to near 100% relative humidity). The third meteorologic index
was the aridity index, characterized by the number of hours in a day during
which the relative humidity is less than 40%.
Norris (12) incorporated these meteorologic indices into a PCA of all
pollutant measurements. Fine and coarse soil components were reconstructed using
a mass attribution model (19) based upon the particulate mass concentrations
of Si, Ca, Fe, and Ti. For Spokane, the factor analysis resulted in four factors
accounting for 65.8% of the variation in the data set. The first factor (29.5%
of variation) included loadings over 0.5 for the stagnation parameter, plus
CO, particulate OC, and EC. The second factor (15.1%) included the cold and
foggy indicator, plus NH4+ and SO42-.
The third factor (11.9%) was composed of coarse soil and particle number, and
the fourth factor (9.3%) included the aridity index and the fine soil (12).
The PM2.5 composition was also analyzed using PCA, which revealed
three factors explaining 60.2% of the variability in the PM2.5 data
set. These factors were represented by the three meteorologic indices as discussed
above, and indicated that products of incomplete combustion were associated
with stagnation; secondary aerosols were associated with cold, foggy conditions;
and fine particulate soil was associated with low relative humidity (12).
Receptor Analyses: PMF/PSCF
To further distinguish sources in Spokane, Kim et al. (16) used PMF
on the EDXRF analyses on a portion of the PM2.5 data set (January
1995 through December 1997). Using PMF, seven sources were hypothesized: vegetative
burning, automobiles, diesel exhaust, secondary PM, the municipal incinerator,
soil, and a metal processing or copper source. As a result, PMF/PSCF identified
both point sources and area sources, and the distinctions between these two
types of sources are apparent. Area sources either exhibit seasonal behavior
or a "background" value, whereas point sources tend to exhibit randomly occurring
spikes that are usually correlated to wind direction. In Spokane, the two major
pollutant point sources are on the outskirts of town: the municipal waste incinerator,
which is at the southwest corner of the airshed, and the Kaiser aluminum plant,
which is at the northeast corner of the airshed. Although point sources would
not be expected to uniformly impact a community because (depending upon wind
direction) both point sources are occasionally upwind of the major population
centers, the particulate measurements taken from the central monitoring site
may provide a reasonable measure of the exposure of the community to particulate
emissions from these sources. For testing the metals hypothesis, we believe
we can take advantage of this capability of PMF/PSCF to distinguish point sources
because point sources may represent significant sources of metals.
Further examination of the secondary aerosol contribution identified by PMF
was conducted using PSCF, which suggested that secondary aerosol, determined
by a combination of sulfur, ammonium, and some iron, seems to be high when the
wind direction is from the northeast, which is also the direction of the aluminum
smelter. We speculate that when further elemental analyses from the ongoing
INAA analyses are incorporated into the PMF receptor model, we may further resolve
this source, currently identified as secondary aerosol, into a secondary aerosol
plus the aluminum smelter.
Health Studies
Epidemiologic studies completed to date for the Spokane data set have examined
the relationships between ED visits for asthma and various pollution measures,
including the PCA indices described above. Results to date are summarized below.
Associations with air pollution measures and meteorologic indices.
Norris et al. (13) evaluated the associations between ED visits for asthma
and several air pollutants and the meteorologic index for stagnation. A 27-month
data set was used for this study (January 1995 through March 1997). Air pollution
measures included PM10, ozone, carbon monoxide, and SO2.
Nonelderly ED visits for asthma were significantly associated [95% confidence
interval (95% CI), 1.05-1.19] with an increase in the interquartile range
in the stagnation parameter, which was associated with products of incomplete
combustion. Nonelderly ED asthma visits were significantly associated with an
interquartile increase in PM10 mass concentration during the spring
and winter only (95% CI, 1.05-1.26 and 1.01-1.16, respectively) (13).
The associations between ED visits for asthma and specific PM components from
the same 27-month data set were further examined by Norris (12). PM exposure
variables for this examination included several sizes, including PM1,
PM2.5, PM10, and coarse-fraction PM. Reconstructed soil
PM2.5, nonsoil PM2.5, and coarse soil PM were examined.
Chemical species examined included soil-corrected K (total K minus soil K),
Zn, Cu, and S. Of the chemical constituents examined (Cu, OC, EC, S, Zn), Zn
was the only one for which a statistically significant association with nonelderly
ED asthma visits was observed (95% CI, 1.01-1.10, for an increase of 9
ng/m3). Zn was found to be associated with combustion sources; in
the factor analysis of this 27-month data subset, the first factor, accounting
for 34.6% of the variability, included the stagnation parameter as well as CO,
OC, EC, and Zn. The association between particulate Zn and observed health outcomes
is intriguing--it is not known whether Zn is a causative agent or an indicator
for some other causative species. The role of Zn in the observed health outcomes
associated with PM exposures is under further investigation.
Dust and soil PM. Norris (12) also examined the associations
between ED visits and reconstructed soil. Reconstructed soil in the fine particle
range (i.e., in PM2.5) was not found to be associated with increased
ED asthma visits in Spokane (95% CI, 0.89-0.97) (12). The associations
between PM of crustal origin and other health end points have also been examined
for Spokane. Schwartz et al. (20) found no association between total
mortality and dust storm occurrences in Spokane. Given these observations, coarse-fraction
(vs. fine-fraction) metal species would not be expected to be associated with
either ED visit or mortality health outcomes. As mentioned above, particulate
metal species from crustal sources could include Fe, Mn, Zn, Ti, and trace amounts
of many other metals. Table 3 summarizes the range of metals concentrations
found to date on coarse-fraction filters. Over 80% of the coarse-fraction samples
contained detectable quantities of Fe, Mn, Ti, Cu, and Zn. With the particulate
data set being amassed for Spokane, it will be possible to test for toxicity
of several coarse-fraction metal species such as Fe, Mn, Zn, Cu, and Ti.
Ongoing studies. Currently, we are examining the relationships
between specific particulate sizes (TEOM measurements of PM10, PM2.5,
and PM1) and certain health outcomes such as ED admissions for asthma
or respiratory events using a larger data set (January 1995 through June 2001).
Specific fine and coarse particulate metals will also be independently examined
for any associations with health outcomes. Particulate metals that have been
found in over 50% of the fine particulate samples analyzed to date include Cr,
Co, As, and Sb (INAA); Mn and Ti (EDXRF); and Fe and Zn (both methods). Other
toxic metals that have been detected but not in the majority of the Spokane
samples include Hg, Cd, V, Ni, and Se. The relatively high number of these samples
that contain below-detection concentrations of these metals will reduce the
statistical power in any statistical analyses of these species. Sources of PM
as determined using PMF/PSCF will also be used as exposure variables in further
statistical analyses. This raises the question of whether any feature extractions
in Spokane are correlated with any of the metals. Table 4 summarizes the correlations
between fine particulate metals and the source features determined from PMF/PSCF.
As expected, Fe and Mn are strongly correlated
|
Table 4
|
(correlation coefficients > 0.90) with soil. Co is also strongly correlated
with soil and is detected in more than 90% of the INAA samples. Zn, As, and
Sb are somewhat correlated with vegetative burning (correlation coefficients
between 0.60 and 0.70), but the reasons for these associations are not known.
This is consistent with the finding of Norris (12) that a correlation
exists between Zn and the stagnation parameter, which in turn is linked to combustion
sources.
Conclusions
Particulate studies conducted to date have shown that particulate pollution
in Spokane occurs as a result of several factors, including stagnation periods
during which concentrations of combustion products are high; arid conditions
during which crustal PM is prevalent, and occasionally during which windblown
dust storms occur; and cold and foggy conditions during which secondary aerosols
occur. Seven major sources of ambient fine PM have been identified using PMF/PSCF,
including both area and point sources. These sources are soil, automobiles,
diesel exhaust, residential wood/biomass combustion, secondary aerosols, waste
incineration, and a Cu or nonferrous metal processing source. The two major
point sources in Spokane that may affect the airshed and contribute to particulate
concentrations are a municipal waste incinerator located to the southwest of
the airshed and an aluminum smelter located to the northeast. The source apportionment
studies conducted to date have not included the ongoing INAA analyses; it is
anticipated that the addition of INAA may help better resolve particulate sources
such as the metal processing source and combustion sources.
Epidemiologic studies conducted to date on a subset of the data collected
in Spokane have focused primarily on ED visits for asthma. Increased ED visits
for asthma have been found to be associated with combustion products and air
stagnation. These analyses will be more thoroughly examined with the full data
set, which will span more than 7 years. ED visits have also been found to be
significantly associated with fine particulate Zn, which is also associated
with combustion products (specifically, biomass burning) and stagnation. It
is not known whether exposure to particulate Zn represents a health risk, or
whether Zn serves as an indicator of another pollutant(s) responsible for the
observed health outcomes. Another possible explanation for the Zn effect is
that it occurred as significant by chance and there is no underlying association.
Analysis of longer time series will help clarify these findings.
Although PM10 and PM2.5 in Spokane both have a significant
soil component, the soil component in either particulate fraction is not associated
with increased ED visits for asthma. Although particulate metals species are
hypothesized to contribute to the toxicity of ambient PM, based upon these observations
we hypothesize that metals in the coarse fraction (i.e., those from soils) will
not be associated with health outcomes, whereas metals in the fine fraction
will be associated with health outcomes. Potential sources of fine-fraction
particulate metals in Spokane include the incinerator and aluminum smelter in
addition to combustion sources such as mobile sources.
These findings provide a good foundation for further hypotheses to be tested.
Future analyses will test for associations between health outcomes and particulate
Zn, as well as OC and EC, which are all associated with combustion products.
The addition of INAA to the chemical analyses of particulate samples has increased
the number of samples with detectable amounts of some of the toxic metals of
interest, thus allowing additional statistical analyses to examine the role
of toxic metals, including the coarse-fraction metals. Finally, specific particulate
source contributions as identified from PMF/PSCF analyses will be examined.
As statistical tests proceed from an examination of PM mass to specific metal
species, there will be some loss of statistical power because of the percentage
of values below detection, although for some metals there is a large fraction
of values that are above detection limits (e.g., Zn, Fe, Co, As, Sb, and Mn
are detectable in >75% of the samples analyzed to date via EDXRF, INAA, or
both). As statistical analyses proceed further to sources of particles, as identified
by PMF/PSCF, we hypothesize that the health effects will be larger and therefore
there will be greater statistical power for the analyses. In CMB-type receptor
models, it is necessary to select the source profiles a priori from a
source library. This means that the sources selected may not actually represent
the particulate constituents to which the people are exposed. By contrast, in
PMF/PSCF (and in PCA), the features are developed from the actual ambient measurements,
which do represent the PM constituents to which the community is exposed. Testing
for associations between specific source contributions as developed from PMF,
therefore, may have less loss of power due to measurement error. Our previous
work has already demonstrated that health effects are associated with the combustion
feature determined from PCA but not the other features. An interesting question
that will be pursued is whether the same relationship will show up with any
of the PMF/PSCF combustion features.
References and Notes
1. National Research Council. Research Priorities for
Airborne Particulate Matter. I: Immediate Priorities and a Long-Range Research
Portfolio. Washington, DC:National Academy Press, 1998.
2. Schwartz J, Dockery D, Neas L. Is daily mortality associated
specifically with fine particles? J Air Waste Manag Assoc 46:927-939 (1996).
3. Daniels MJ, Dominici F, Samet JM, Zeger SL. Estimating
particulate matter-mortality dose-response curves and threshold levels: an analysis
of daily time-series for the 20 largest US cities. Am J Epidemiol 152:397-406
(2000).
4. Lighty JS, Veranth JM, Sarofim AF. Combustion aerosols:
factors governing their size and composition and implications to human health.
J Air Waste Manage Assoc 50:1565-1568 (2000).
5. Kelleher P, Pacheco K, Newman LS. Inorganic dust pneumonias:
the metal-related parenchymal disorders. Environ Health Perspect 108(suppl 4):685-696
(2000).
6. U.S. EPA. Air Quality Criteria for Particulate Matter.
EPA-600-P-95-001cF. Washington, DC:U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
1996.
7. Kennedy T, Ghio AJ, Reed W, Samet J, Zagorski J, Quay
J, Carter J, Dailey L, Hoidal JR, Devlin RB. Copper-dependent inflammation and
nuclear factor-[kappa]B activation by particulate air pollution. Am J Respir
Cell Mol Biol 19:366-378 (1998).
8. Pope CA III. Respiratory disease associated with community
air pollution and a steel mill, Utah Valley. Am J Public Health 79:623-628
(1989).
9. Pope CA III. Respiratory hospital admissions associated
with PM10 in Utah, Salt Lake, and Cache valleys. Arch Environ Health
46:90-97 (1991).
10. Haller L, Claiborn CS, Koenig J, Larson T, Norris
G. Airborne particulate matter size distributions in an and urban area. J Air
Waste Manag Assoc 49:161-168 (1999).
11. Claiborn C, Lamb BK, Miller A, Beseda J, Clode B,
Vaughan J, Kang L, Newvine C. Regional measurements and modeling of windblown
agricultural dust: the Columbia Plateau PM10 program. J Geophy Res
103:19,753-19,767 (1998).
12. Norris G. Air Pollution and the Exacerbation of Asthma
in an Arid, Western U.S. City [PhD Thesis]. Seattle, WA:University of Washington,
1998.
13. Norris G, Larson T, Koenig J, Claiborn C, Sheppard
L, Finn D. Asthma aggravation, combustion, and stagnant air. Thorax 55:466-470
(2000).
14. Schwartz J. Air pollution and hospital admissions
for respiratory disease. Epidemiology 7:20-28 (1996).
15. Birch ME, Cary RA. Elemental carbon-based method for
monitoring occupational exposures to particulate diesel exhaust. Aerosol Sci
Technol 25:221-241 (1996).
16. Kim E, Larson T, Claiborn C, Sheppard L. Unpublished
data.
17. Hoffman MD. Elemental Analysis and Receptor Modeling
of Airborne Particulate Matter in Spokane, WA [MS Thesis]. Pullman, WA:Washington
State University, 2002.
18. Hopke PK. Receptor modeling for air quality management.
Environ Sci Technol 8:95-117 (1997).
19. Malm WC, Sisler JF, Huffman D, Eldred RA, Cahill TA.
Spatial and seasonal trends in particle concentration and optical extinction
in the United States. J Geophys Res 99:1347-1370 (1994).
20. Schwartz J, Norris G, Larson T, Sheppard L, Claiborn
C, Koenig J. Episodes of high coarse particle concentrations are not associated
with increased mortality. Environ Health Perspect 107:339-342 (1999).
Last Updated: August 5, 2002