Background: Bedroom allergen exposures contribute to allergic disease morbidity because people spend considerable time in bedrooms, where they come into close contact with allergen reservoirs.
Objective: We investigated participant and housing characteristics, including sociodemographic, regional, and climatic factors, associated with bedroom allergen exposures in a nationally representative sample of the US population.
Methods: Data were obtained from National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 2005-2006. Information on participant and housing characteristics was collected by using questionnaires and environmental assessments. Concentrations of 8 indoor allergens (Alt a 1, Bla g 1, Can f 1, Fel d 1, Der f 1, Der p 1, Mus m 1, and Rat n 1) in dust vacuumed from nearly 7000 bedrooms were measured by using immunoassays. Exposure levels were classified as increased based on percentile (75th/90th) cutoffs. We estimated the burden of exposure to multiple allergens and used multivariable logistic regression to identify independent predictors for each allergen and household allergen burden.
Results: Almost all participants (>99%) had at least 1 and 74.2% had 3 to 6 allergens detected. More than two thirds of participants (72.9%) had at least 1 allergen and 18.2% had 3 or more allergens exceeding increased levels. Although exposure variability showed significant racial/ethnic and regional differences, high exposure burden to multiple allergens was most consistently associated with the presence of pets and pests, living in mobile homes/trailers and older and rental homes, and living in nonmetropolitan areas.
Conclusions: Exposure to multiple allergens is common. Despite highly variable exposures, bedroom allergen burden is strongly associated with the presence of pets and pests.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jaci.2017.08.033 | DOI Listing |
World Allergy Organ J
June 2024
Department of Internal Medicine, Section of Allergology & Clinical Immunology, Erasmus MC, University Medical Center Rotterdam, P.O. Box 2040, 3000 CA, Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
CHEST Pulm
December 2023
Harvard Medical School (S. G.-N., M. H., X. Y., L. L., M. R., C. C.-D., J. O., D. R. G., W. P., and S. R.); the Division of Sleep and Circadian Disorders (S. G.-N., X. Y., L. L., M. R., C. C.-D., and S. R.), Brigham and Women's Hospital; the Division of Pulmonary and Sleep Medicine(S. G.-N.), Boston Children's Hospital; the Division of General Pediatrics (M. H.), Boston Children's Hospital; the Region1 New England Pediatric Environmental Health Specialty Unit (PEHSU) (M. H.); the Department of Statistics (T. S.), Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health; the Division of Neurology (J. O.), Boston Children's Hospital; the Department of Medicine (D. R. G.), Brigham and Women's Hospital; the Department of Environmental Medicine (D. R. G. and G. A.), Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health; the Department of Occupational and Environmental Health (N. M. and P. S. T.), University of Iowa College of Public Health; the Division of Allergy/Immunology (W. P.), Boston Children's Hospital; and the Department of Epidemiology (S. R.), Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.
Environ Res
December 2023
Department of Population Health, Dell Medical School University of Texas at Austin, 1601 Trinity St., Bldg. B, Stop Z0500, Austin, TX, 78712, USA.
Determining biomarkers of responses to environmental exposures and evaluating whether they predict respiratory outcomes may help optimize environmental and medical approaches to childhood asthma. Relative mitochondrial (mt) DNA abundance and other potential mitochondrial indicators of oxidative stress may provide a sensitive metric of the child's shifting molecular responses to its changing environment. We leveraged two urban childhood cohorts (Environmental Control as Add-on Therapy in Childhood Asthma (ECATCh); Columbia Center for Children's Environmental Health (CCCEH)) to ascertain whether biomarkers in buccal mtDNA associate with airway inflammation and altered lung function over 6 months of time and capture biologic responses to multiple external stressors such as indoor allergens and fine particulate matter (PM).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Total Environ
July 2023
Department of Entomology, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, USA.
Histamine is a component of the bed bug aggregation pheromone. It was recently identified as an environmental contaminant in homes with active bed bug infestations, posing a potential health risk to humans via skin contact or inhalation. It remains unclear how histamine is distributed in homes and if histamine can become airborne.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Allergy Clin Immunol
March 2023
Department of Population Health, Dell Medical School at UT Austin, Austin, Tex; Department of Pediatrics, Dell Medical School at UT Austin, Austin, Tex. Electronic address:
Background: Air trapping is an obstructive phenotype that has been associated with more severe and unstable asthma in children. Air trapping has been defined using pre- and postbronchodilator spirometry. The causes of air trapping are not completely understood.
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