Abstract

Measuring house dust mite aeroallergen concentrations is essential in understanding mite allergen exposure. Physically, the aerolized house dust mite faeces are part of indoor particulate matter. We studied the statistical ways of summarizing measurements of fluctuating mite aeroallergen exposure inside homes through indoor particulate matter. To study emissions from beddings, we measured the time-related airborne dust concentration after shaking a duvet. Analysis was performed both by a method based on the estimated mean and by a non-linear model. Twenty-eight studies reported a sum of concentrations; only one also reported the peak. In our four experiments on shaking a duvet (245 to 275 measurements each), the peak value was two to four times higher than the mean. The mean-based and non-linear models both predicted the sum of concentrations exactly. A 1% upper prediction bound and the non-linear model predicted the peak emission rate moderately well (64 to 92%, and 63 to 93%, respectively). Mean levels of indoor particulate matter measurements differ substantially from peak concentrations. The use of the mean is only sufficient to predict the sum of concentrations. We suggest that, mite aeroallergen measurements should include information on the peak as well as the mean.

Highlights

  • Measuring house dust mite aeroallergen concentrations is essential in understanding mite allergen exposure

  • The aim of this study is to examine the summary-statistics of describing variation in dust mite allergen exposure levels inside homes through varying indoor particulate matter

  • We found 610 references related to the measurement of airborne house dust mite allergen concentration, of which 81 appeared to be duplicated (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Measuring house dust mite aeroallergen concentrations is essential in understanding mite allergen exposure. We studied the statistical ways of summarizing measurements of fluctuating mite aeroallergen exposure inside homes through indoor particulate matter. To study emissions from beddings, we measured the time-related airborne dust concentration after shaking a duvet. Analysis was performed both by a method based on the estimated mean and by a non-linear model. Assessment of exposure to house dust mite aeroallergens is essential in determining the potential contribution to an allergic ­reaction[1]. Measuring such aeroallergens is possible through sampling of indoor particulate matter, followed by an assay. From a statistical point of view, a not well-discussed topic is whether the use of mean concentrations describing mite aeroallergen concentrations can be improved by presenting more information on the peaks

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