Short-Term Exposure to Urban Air Pollution and Influences on Placental Vascularization Indexes

Environ Health Perspect. 2017 Apr;125(4):753-759. doi: 10.1289/EHP300. Epub 2016 Jul 6.

Abstract

Background: It has been widely demonstrated that air pollution can affect human health and that certain pollutant gases lead to adverse obstetric outcomes, such as preeclampsia and fetal growth restriction.

Objectives: We evaluated the influence of individual maternal exposure to air pollution on placental volume and vascularization evaluated in the first trimester of pregnancy.

Methods: This was a cross-sectional study on low-risk pregnant women living in São Paulo, Brazil. The women carried passive personal NO2 and O3 monitors in the week preceding evaluation. We employed the virtual organ computer-aided analysis (VOCAL) technique using three-dimensional power Doppler ultrasound to evaluate placental volume and placental vascular indexes [vascularization index (VI), flow index (FI), and vascularization flow index (VFI)]. We analyzed the influence of pollutant levels on log-transformed placental vascularization and volume using multiple regression models.

Results: We evaluated 229 patients. Increased NO2 levels had a significant negative association with log of VI (p = 0.020 and beta = -0.153) and VFI (p = 0.024 and beta = -0.151). NO2 and O3 had no influence on the log of placental volume or FI.

Conclusions: NO2, an estimator of primary air pollutants, was significantly associated with diminished VI and VFI in the first trimester of pregnancy.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Air Pollution / statistics & numerical data*
  • Brazil
  • Cross-Sectional Studies
  • Environmental Monitoring
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Maternal Exposure / statistics & numerical data*
  • Nitrogen Dioxide / analysis
  • Ozone / analysis
  • Placenta / blood supply*
  • Placenta / physiology
  • Pre-Eclampsia
  • Pregnancy

Substances

  • Ozone
  • Nitrogen Dioxide