Abstract

BackgroundAlmost half the world's population is exposed to household air pollution from biomass and coal combustion. The acute effects of household air pollution on the cardiovascular system are poorly characterized. We conducted a panel study of rural Indian women to assess whether personal exposures to black carbon during cooking were associated with acute changes in blood pressure. MethodsWe enrolled 45 women (ages 25–66 years) who cooked with biomass fuels. During cooking sessions in winter and summer, we simultaneously measured their personal real-time exposure to black carbon and conducted ambulatory blood pressure measurements every 10min. We recorded ambient temperature and participants' activities while cooking. We assessed body mass index, socioeconomic status, and salt intake. Multivariate mixed effects regression models with random intercepts were used to estimate the associations between blood pressure and black carbon exposure, e.g., average exposure in the minutes preceding blood pressure measurement, and average exposure over an entire cooking session. ResultsWomen's geometric mean (GM) exposure to black carbon during cooking sessions was lower in winter (GM: 40μg/m3; 95% CI: 30, 53) than in summer (GM: 56μg/m3; 95% CI: 42, 76). Interquartile range increases in black carbon were associated with changes in systolic blood pressure from −0.4mm Hg (95% CI: −2.3, 1.5) to 1.9mm Hg (95% CI: −0.8, 4.7), with associations increasing in magnitude as black carbon values were assessed over greater time periods preceding blood pressure measurement. Interquartile range increases in black carbon were associated with small decreases in diastolic blood pressure from −0.9mm Hg (95% CI: −1.7, −0.1) to −0.4mm Hg (95% CI: −1.6, 0.8). Associations of a similar magnitude were estimated for cooking session-averaged values. ConclusionsWe found some evidence of an association between exposure to black carbon and acute increases in systolic blood pressure in Indian women cooking with biomass fuels, which may have implications for the development of cardiovascular diseases.

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