Ozone versus Ozone Reaction Products: Which Is Responsible for Cardiorespiratory Effects?

Junfeng Zhang*, Linchen He, Charles J. Weschler

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference abstract in proceedingsResearchpeer-review

    Abstract

    When outdoor ozone is transported indoors, a substantial fraction is removed by reactions with indoor surfaces. These reactions generate products that can be inhaled together with ozone. In a panel of 89 healthy workers, we measured ozone concentrations outside and inside offices and residences and collected time-activity data. We used ozone loss - the difference between outdoor and indoor concentrations - as a proxy of exposure to ozone reaction products. Biomarkers of cardiorespiratory pathophysiology were measured 4 times for each participant over a period of 6 weeks. We compared the effects of ozone versus “ozone loss” exposures. We found that ozone loss was more strongly associated with several biomarkers than was ozone itself. Adverse effects were stronger for shorter periods of ozone loss but for longer periods of ozone exposure.
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationProceedings of Indoor Air 2022
    PublisherInternational Society of Indoor Air Quality and Climate
    Publication date2022
    Publication statusPublished - 2022
    Event17th International Conference of the International Society of Indoor Air Quality & Climate - University of Eastern Finland, Kuopio, Finland
    Duration: 12 Jun 202216 Jun 2022
    Conference number: 17
    https://indoorair2022.org/

    Conference

    Conference17th International Conference of the International Society of Indoor Air Quality & Climate
    Number17
    LocationUniversity of Eastern Finland
    Country/TerritoryFinland
    CityKuopio
    Period12/06/202216/06/2022
    Internet address

    Keywords

    • Cardiovascular effect
    • Indoor chemistry
    • Panel study
    • Pulmonary effect
    • Surface chemistry

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