Author:
Mokhtar Sara B. A.,Viljoen Jessica,van der Kallen Carla J. H.,Berendschot Tos T. J. M.,Dagnelie Pieter C.,Albers Jeroen D.,Soeterboek Jens,Scarpa Fabio,Colonna Alessia,van der Heide Frank C. T.,van Greevenbroek Marleen M. J.,Bosm Hans,Kroon Abraham A.,Nuijts Rudy M. M. A.,Gijs Marlies,Lakerveld Jeroen,Malik Rayaz A.,Webers Carroll A. B.,Stehouwer Coen D. A.,Koster Annemarie
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Epidemiological and toxicological studies indicate that increased exposure to air pollutants can lead to neurodegenerative diseases. To further confirm this relationship, we evaluated the association between exposure to ambient air pollutants and corneal nerve measures as a surrogate for neurodegeneration, using corneal confocal microscopy.
Methods
We used population-based observational cross-sectional data from The Maastricht Study including N = 3635 participants (mean age 59.3 years, 51.6% were women, and 19.9% had type 2 diabetes) living in the Maastricht area. Using the Geoscience and hEalth Cohort COnsortium (GECCO) data we linked the yearly average exposure levels of ambient air pollutants at home address-level [particulate matter with diameters of ≤ 2.5 µm (PM2.5), and ≤ 10.0 µm (PM10), nitrogen dioxide (NO2), and elemental carbon (EC)]. We used linear regression analysis to study the associations between Z-score for ambient air pollutants concentrations (PM2.5, PM10, NO2, and EC) and Z-score for individual corneal nerve measures (corneal nerve bifurcation density, corneal nerve density, corneal nerve length, and fractal dimension).
Results
After adjustment for potential confounders (age, sex, level of education, glucose metabolism status, corneal confocal microscopy lag time, inclusion year of participants, smoking status, and alcohol consumption), higher Z-scores for PM2.5 and PM10 were associated with lower Z-scores for corneal nerve bifurcation density, nerve density, nerve length, and nerve fractal dimension [stβ (95% CI): PM2.5 -0.10 (-0.14; -0.05), -0.04 (-0.09; 0.01), -0.11 (-0.16; -0.06), -0.20 (-0.24; -0.15); and PM10 -0.08 (-0.13; -0.03), -0.04 (-0.09; 0.01), -0.08 (-0.13; -0.04), -0.17 (-0.21; -0.12)], respectively. No associations were found between NO2 and EC and corneal nerve measures.
Conclusions
Our population-based study demonstrated that exposure to higher levels of PM2.5 and PM10 are associated with higher levels of corneal neurodegeneration, estimated from lower corneal nerve measures. Our results suggest that air pollution may be a determinant for neurodegeneration assessed in the cornea and may impact the ocular surface health as well.
Funder
OP-Zuid, the Province of Limburg, the Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs
Stichting de Weijerhorst
the Pearl String Initiative Diabetes
the Cardiovascular Center
the School for Cardiovascular Diseases
the School of Mental Health and Neuroscience
the School for Public Health and Primary Care
the School for Nutrition and Translational Research in Metabolism
Stichting Annadal
Health Foundation Limburg
Perimed
Janssen-Cilag
Novo Nordisk
Sanofi-Aventi
GECCO is financially supported by The Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO), The Netherlands
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC