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Symptoms in Response to Controlled Diesel Exhaust More Closely Reflect Exposure Perception Than True Exposure
Authors:Chris Carlsten  Assaf P Oron  Heidi Curtiss  Sara Jarvis  William Daniell  Joel D Kaufman
Abstract:

Background

Diesel exhaust (DE) exposures are very common, yet exposure-related symptoms haven’t been rigorously examined.

Objective

Describe symptomatic responses to freshly generated and diluted DE and filtered air (FA) in a controlled human exposure setting; assess whether such responses are altered by perception of exposure.

Methods

43 subjects participated within three double-blind crossover experiments to order-randomized DE exposure levels (FA and DE calibrated at 100 and/or 200 micrograms/m3 particulate matter of diameter less than 2.5 microns), and completed questionnaires regarding symptoms and dose perception.

Results

For a given symptom cluster, the majority of those exposed to moderate concentrations of diesel exhaust do not report such symptoms. The most commonly reported symptom cluster was of the nose (29%). Blinding to exposure is generally effective. Perceived exposure, rather than true exposure, is the dominant modifier of symptom reporting.

Conclusion

Controlled human exposure to moderate-dose diesel exhaust is associated with a range of mild symptoms, though the majority of individuals will not experience any given symptom. Blinding to DE exposure is generally effective. Perceived DE exposure, rather than true DE exposure, is the dominant modifier of symptom reporting.
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