Association between ambient temperature and chronic rhinosinusitis

Author:

Du Runming1ORCID,Jiao Wangteng1,Ma Junxiong1,Zhou Qinfeng1,Liang Zhi‐Sheng1,Sun Shengzhi2,Ahmed Omar G.3,Rowan Nicholas R.4ORCID,Pinto Jayant M.5,Ramanathan Murugappan4,Zhang Zhenyu16

Affiliation:

1. Department of Global Health Peking University School of Public Health Beijing China

2. School of Public Health Capital Medical University Beijing China

3. Division of Rhinology, Sinus, Sleep & Skull Base Surgery Houston Methodist Hospital Houston Texas USA

4. Department of Otolaryngology‐Head and Neck Surgery Johns Hopkins School of Medicine Baltimore Maryland USA

5. Section of Otolaryngology‐Head and Neck Surgery The University of Chicago Chicago Illinois USA

6. Institute for Global Health and Development Peking University Beijing China

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundChronic exposure to particulate matter air pollution (PM2.5) is associated with chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS). Elevated ambient temperature may increase PM2.5 levels and thereby exacerbate sinonasal symptoms. This study investigates the association between high ambient temperature and the risk of CRS diagnosis.MethodsPatients with CRS were diagnosed at Johns Hopkins hospitals from May to October 2013–2022, and controls were matched patients without CRS meanwhile. A total of 4752 patients (2376 cases and 2376 controls) were identified with a mean (SD) age of 51.8 (16.8) years. The effect of maximum ambient temperature on symptoms was estimated with a distributed lag nonlinear model (DLNM). Extreme heat was defined as 35.0°C (95th percentile of the maximum temperature distribution). Conditional logistic regression models estimated the association between extreme heat and the risk of CRS diagnosis.ResultsExposure to extreme heat was associated with increased odds of exacerbation of CRS symptoms (odds ratio [OR] 1.11, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.03–1.19). The cumulative effect of extreme heat during 0–21 lag days was significant (OR 2.37, 95% CI 1.60–3.50) compared with the minimum morbidity temperature (MMT) at 25.3°C. Associations were more pronounced among young and middle‐aged patients and patients with abnormal weight.ConclusionsWe found that short‐term exposure to high ambient temperature is associated with increased CRS diagnosis, suggesting a cascading effect of meteorological phenomena. These results highlight climate change's potentially deleterious health effects on upper airway diseases, which could have a significant public health impact.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Otorhinolaryngology,Immunology and Allergy

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