Antioxidant alterations link polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons to blood pressure in children

  • Qihua Wang
  • , Xijin Xu
  • , Zhijun Zeng
  • , Xiangbin Zheng
  • , Kai Ye
  • , Xia Huo*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    21 Citations (Scopus)
    147 Downloads (Pure)

    Abstract

    Exposure to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) is associated with changes in blood pressure. However, the association is controversial in different studies, and antioxidants' roles involved in it remain unclear. To investigate the associations among PAH exposure, blood pressure, and antioxidant concentrations, we recruited 403 children (2–7 years old), of which 203 were from Guiyu, an e-waste-recycling area (exposed group), and 200 were from Haojiang, a nearby non-e-waste area (reference group). Levels of blood pressure, plasma vitamin E, serum superoxide dismutase (SOD), serum glutathione peroxidase (GPx), and eight urinary hydroxylated PAHs (OH-PAHs) were measured. Compared with Haojiang children, Guiyu children had higher urinary OH-PAH concentrations but lower systolic pressure, pulse pressure, serum SOD concentration, and serum GPx concentration (all P < 0.05). PAH exposure was associated with lower systolic pressure, pulse pressure, SOD (adjusted β = −0.091, −0.104 and −0.154, respectively, all P < 0.05, in all children), GPx (adjusted β∑7LMW-OH-PAHs-T3 = −0.332, only in Haojiang children) and vitamin E (adjusted OR∑7LMW-OH-PAHs = 0.838, 95% CI: 0.706, 0.995, only in Guiyu children). Serum SOD and GPx were associated with higher blood pressure (βSOD-T2 for diastolic pressure = 0.215 in all children, βSOD-T3 for systolic pressure = 0.193 in all children, βSOD-T3 for pulse pressure = 0.281 in high-∑8OH-PAHs children, βGPx-T2 = 0.283 and βGPx-T3 = 0.289 for diastolic pressure in Haojiang children, all P < 0.05). Interactions between PAHs and vitamin E were associated with lower systolic pressure and pulse pressure; simple effects of vitamin E to raise systolic pressure and pulse pressure were only significant in low-∑8OH-PAHs children. Our results indicate that PAH exposure, especially at high levels, and further antioxidant-decrease are potential risk factors for blood-pressure decrease in children; vascular function of PAH-exposed children may be impaired, manifesting as disordered blood pressure.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article number138944
    Number of pages9
    JournalScience of the Total Environment
    Volume732
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 25-Aug-2020

    Keywords

    • UMBILICAL-CORD BLOOD
    • E-WASTE
    • OXIDATIVE STRESS
    • CARDIOVASCULAR-DISEASE
    • URINARY METABOLITES
    • ADAPTIVE RESPONSE
    • DIPHENYL ETHERS
    • BIRTH OUTCOMES
    • AIR-POLLUTION
    • PAH EXPOSURE

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