Human Inhalation Exposure to Aerosol and Health Effect: Aerosol Monitoring and Modelling Regional Deposited Doses

Since poor air quality affects human health in the short and long term, much research has been performed on indoor and outdoor aerosol exposure; however, there is a lack of specific data on the exposure and health risks of inhalable aerosols that contain bioaerosol in different environments of human...

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Main Authors: Hyeon-Ju Oh, Yoohan Ma, Jongbok Kim
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-03-01
Series:International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/17/6/1923
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spelling doaj-d03375d8368647d898a330d849872fea2020-11-25T03:11:37ZengMDPI AGInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health1660-46012020-03-01176192310.3390/ijerph17061923ijerph17061923Human Inhalation Exposure to Aerosol and Health Effect: Aerosol Monitoring and Modelling Regional Deposited DosesHyeon-Ju Oh0Yoohan Ma1Jongbok Kim2Department of Health &amp; Environmental Science, Korea University, Seoul 02841, KoreaDepartment of Materials Science and Engineering, Kumoh National Institute of Technology, 61 Daehak-ro (yangho-dong), Gumi, Gyeongbuk 39177, KoreaDepartment of Materials Science and Engineering, Kumoh National Institute of Technology, 61 Daehak-ro (yangho-dong), Gumi, Gyeongbuk 39177, KoreaSince poor air quality affects human health in the short and long term, much research has been performed on indoor and outdoor aerosol exposure; however, there is a lack of specific data on the exposure and health risks of inhalable aerosols that contain bioaerosol in different environments of human life. To investigate the potential exposure to inhalable aerosols (in the monitoring of particulate matter (PM) based on R modeling, variations of PM depend on the ventilation system and bioaerosols based on size distribution) in various environments, the special viability and culturability of bioaerosols and their deposition doses in the respiratory system were evaluated. We conducted exposure assessments on inhalable aerosols in various indoor environments (childcare facilities, schools, commercial buildings, elderly and homes). The fractions of PM (PM<sub>10</sub>, PM<sub>4</sub> and PM<sub>2.5</sub>) were investigated and, for the bioaerosol, the viability, culturability, inhalation daily dose and the deposited dose of the aerosol in the respiratory system were calculated to evaluate the human health effects. For two years, the distribution of the indoor PM concentration was high in all PM fractions in schools and commercial buildings, and low in the elderly and at homes. For airborne bacteria, the highest concentrations were shown in the childcare facility during the four seasons, while airborne fungi showed high concentrations in the buildings during the spring and summer, which showed significant differences from other investigated environments (between the buildings and elderly and homes: <i>p</i> &lt; 0.05). The viability and culturability for the bioaerosol showed no significant difference in all environments, and the correlation between inhalable PM and bioaerosol obtained from the six-stage impactor showed that the coefficient of determination (R<sup>2</sup>) between coarse particles (PM<sub>10&#8722;2.5</sub>, the size of stage 2&#8722;3) and cultivable airborne bacteria ranged from 0.70 (elderly and homes) to 0.84 (school) during the summer season.https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/17/6/1923aerosol monitoringmodelinginhalation exposurebioaerosolfractions of particulate matter
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hyeon-Ju Oh
Yoohan Ma
Jongbok Kim
spellingShingle Hyeon-Ju Oh
Yoohan Ma
Jongbok Kim
Human Inhalation Exposure to Aerosol and Health Effect: Aerosol Monitoring and Modelling Regional Deposited Doses
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
aerosol monitoring
modeling
inhalation exposure
bioaerosol
fractions of particulate matter
author_facet Hyeon-Ju Oh
Yoohan Ma
Jongbok Kim
author_sort Hyeon-Ju Oh
title Human Inhalation Exposure to Aerosol and Health Effect: Aerosol Monitoring and Modelling Regional Deposited Doses
title_short Human Inhalation Exposure to Aerosol and Health Effect: Aerosol Monitoring and Modelling Regional Deposited Doses
title_full Human Inhalation Exposure to Aerosol and Health Effect: Aerosol Monitoring and Modelling Regional Deposited Doses
title_fullStr Human Inhalation Exposure to Aerosol and Health Effect: Aerosol Monitoring and Modelling Regional Deposited Doses
title_full_unstemmed Human Inhalation Exposure to Aerosol and Health Effect: Aerosol Monitoring and Modelling Regional Deposited Doses
title_sort human inhalation exposure to aerosol and health effect: aerosol monitoring and modelling regional deposited doses
publisher MDPI AG
series International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
issn 1660-4601
publishDate 2020-03-01
description Since poor air quality affects human health in the short and long term, much research has been performed on indoor and outdoor aerosol exposure; however, there is a lack of specific data on the exposure and health risks of inhalable aerosols that contain bioaerosol in different environments of human life. To investigate the potential exposure to inhalable aerosols (in the monitoring of particulate matter (PM) based on R modeling, variations of PM depend on the ventilation system and bioaerosols based on size distribution) in various environments, the special viability and culturability of bioaerosols and their deposition doses in the respiratory system were evaluated. We conducted exposure assessments on inhalable aerosols in various indoor environments (childcare facilities, schools, commercial buildings, elderly and homes). The fractions of PM (PM<sub>10</sub>, PM<sub>4</sub> and PM<sub>2.5</sub>) were investigated and, for the bioaerosol, the viability, culturability, inhalation daily dose and the deposited dose of the aerosol in the respiratory system were calculated to evaluate the human health effects. For two years, the distribution of the indoor PM concentration was high in all PM fractions in schools and commercial buildings, and low in the elderly and at homes. For airborne bacteria, the highest concentrations were shown in the childcare facility during the four seasons, while airborne fungi showed high concentrations in the buildings during the spring and summer, which showed significant differences from other investigated environments (between the buildings and elderly and homes: <i>p</i> &lt; 0.05). The viability and culturability for the bioaerosol showed no significant difference in all environments, and the correlation between inhalable PM and bioaerosol obtained from the six-stage impactor showed that the coefficient of determination (R<sup>2</sup>) between coarse particles (PM<sub>10&#8722;2.5</sub>, the size of stage 2&#8722;3) and cultivable airborne bacteria ranged from 0.70 (elderly and homes) to 0.84 (school) during the summer season.
topic aerosol monitoring
modeling
inhalation exposure
bioaerosol
fractions of particulate matter
url https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/17/6/1923
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