Background: Several previous studies examined the association between acute myocardial infarction (AMI) incidence and temperature and/or air pollution. Results of these studies have been inconsistent and few studies have been done in cities with sub-tropical or tropical climates.
Methods: Daily data on AMI hospitalizations, mean temperature and humidity, and pollutants, were collected for 2000-2009 for three warm-climate Asian cities. Poisson Generalized Additive Models were used to regress daily AMI counts on temperature, humidity, and pollutants while controlling for day of the week, long-term trends and seasonal effects. Smoothing splines allowing non-linear associations were used for temperature and humidity while pollutants were modeled as linear terms.
Results: A 1°C drop below a threshold temperature of 24°C was significantly (p<.0001) associated with AMI hospitalization increases of 3.7% (average lag 0-13 temperature) in Hong Kong, 2.6% (average lag 0-15) in Taipei, and 4.0% (average lag 0-11) in Kaohsiung. No significant heat effects were observed. Among pollutants same day nitrogen dioxide (NO2) levels were the strongest predictors in all three cities, with a 10mg/m(3) increase in NO2 being associated with a 1.1% rise in AMI hospitalization in Hong Kong, and a 10 ppb rise being associated with 4.4% and 2.6% rises in Taipei and Kaohsiung, respectively.
Conclusions: Cool temperatures and higher NO2 levels substantially raised AMI risk in these warm-climate cities and the effect sizes we observed were stronger than those found in previous studies. More attention should be paid to the health dangers of cold weather in warm-climate cities.
Keywords: Acute myocardial infarction; Air pollution; Biometeorology; Temperature.
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