Journal of Epidemiology
Online ISSN : 1349-9092
Print ISSN : 0917-5040
ISSN-L : 0917-5040
Original Article
The Relationship Between Asian Dust Events and Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrests in Japan
Takahiro Nakamura, Masahiro Hashizume, Kayo Ueda, Tatsuhiko Kubo, Atsushi Shimizu, Tomonori Okamura, Yuji Nishiwaki
Author information
  • Takahiro Nakamura

    Department of Environmental and Occupational Health, School of Medicine, Toho University

  • Masahiro Hashizume

    Department of Paediatric Infectious Diseases, Institute of Tropical Medicine, Nagasaki University

  • Kayo Ueda

    Department of Environmental Engineering, Kyoto University Graduate School of Engineering

  • Tatsuhiko Kubo

    Department of Public Health, University of Occupational and Environmental Health

  • Atsushi Shimizu

    Regional Atmospheric Environment Section Center for Regional Environmental Research, National Institute for Environmental Studies

  • Tomonori Okamura

    Department of Preventive Medicine & Public Heath, School of Medicine, Keio University

  • Yuji Nishiwaki

    Department of Environmental and Occupational Health, School of Medicine, Toho University

Corresponding author

ORCID
Keywords: Asian dust, Utstein-Style data, out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, case crossover analysis
JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
Supplementary material

2015 Volume 25 Issue 4 Pages 289-296

Browse "Advance online publication" version
Details
  • Published: April 05, 2015 Received: September 18, 2014 Released on J-STAGE: April 05, 2015 Accepted: November 09, 2014 Advance online publication: March 21, 2015 Revised: -
Download PDF (586K)
Download citation RIS

(compatible with EndNote, Reference Manager, ProCite, RefWorks)

BIB TEX

(compatible with BibDesk, LaTeX)

How to download citation
Contact us
Abstract
Background: Asian dust events are caused by dust storms that originate in the deserts of China and Mongolia and drift across East Asia. We hypothesized that the dust events would increase incidence of out-of-hospital cardiac arrests by triggering acute events or exacerbating chronic diseases.
Methods: We analyzed the Utstein-Style data collected in 2005 to 2008 from seven prefectures covering almost the entire length of Japan to investigate the effect of Asian dust events on out-of-hospital cardiac arrests. Asian dust events were defined by the measurement of light detection and ranging. A time-stratified case-crossover analysis was performed. The strength of the association between Asian dust events and out-of-hospital cardiac arrests was shown by odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals in two conditional logistic models. A pooled estimate was obtained from area-specific results by random-effect meta-analysis.
Results: The total number of cases of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest was 59 273, of which 35 460 were in men and 23 813 were in women. The total number of event days during the study period was smallest in Miyagi and Niigata and largest in Shimane and Nagasaki. There was no significant relationship between Asian dust events and out-of-hospital cardiac arrests by area in either of the models. In the pooled analysis, the highest odds ratios were observed at lag day 1 in both model 1 (OR 1.07; 95% CI, 0.97–1.19) and model 2 (OR 1.08; 95% CI, 0.97–1.20). However, these results were not statistically significant.
Conclusions: We found no evidence of an association between Asian dust events and out-of-hospital cardiac arrests.
References (21)
Related articles (0)
Figures (0)
Content from these authors
Supplementary material (2)
Result List ()
Cited by (12)
© 2015 Takahiro Nakamura et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Previous article Next article
Favorites & Alerts

Recently viewed articles
Share this page
Top

Register with J-STAGE for free!

Register

Already have an account? Sign in here

AltStyle によって変換されたページ (->オリジナル) /