LINKING DAY-TO-DAY VARIABILITY IN AIR POLLUTION EXPOSURE TO HUMAN BRAIN STRUCTURE
Max Planck Institute for Human Development
Presentation
Date TBA
Event Information
Poster Board
PS04-08PM-294
Poster
View posterAbstract
Here, we focus on how daily fluctuations in air pollution are associated with changes in structural brain integrity over time. Participants completed up to 25 testing sessions over approximately four months, each including MRI acquisition and 24-h particulate matter (PM2.5) measurements before scanning.
The current sample comprises 21 participants (mean age = 28.3 ± 5.6 years; 47.6% assigned female at birth), who completed an average of 24.1 sessions (SD = 4.1). Median 24-h PM2.5 exposure was 7.9 µg/m³ (IQR = 5.2–13.9), with a mean of 15.5 µg/m³ (SD = 30.3; range = 1.6–392.7). Preliminary analyses indicated substantial within-person variability in 24-h PM2.5 exposure across sessions (median within-person variance S2 = 29.4 (µg/m3)2; SD = 5.4 µg/m³), with 68.1% of total variability reflecting session-to-session fluctuations within individuals rather than between-person differences.
We will use continuous-time dynamic modeling to examine how short-term air pollution exposure relates to temporal fluctuations in structural brain integrity. Latent factors of structural brain integrity are derived from voxel-based morphometry, mean diffusivity, and magnetization transfer saturation. This ongoing analysis will enable a novel investigation into how temporal brain dynamics are associated with real-world environmental exposures.
Recommended posters
LONG-TERM EFFECTS OF POSTNATAL PM10 INHALATION ON NEUROBEHAVIOR AND BRAIN MOLECULAR PROFILES IN APOE3 AND APOE4 HUMANIZED MICE
Rocío Rodulfo Cárdenas, Judit Biosca Brull, Séfora Barberà Parada, Raquel Gabaldón Díaz, Diego Ruiz Sobremazas, Jordi Blanco, Maria Cabré, Fernando Sánchez Santed, Caridad López Granero, Maria Teresa Colomina
EXPOSOME SIGNATURES IN BRAIN STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION: EVIDENCE FROM MONOZYGOTIC TWINS
Moana Beyer, Simone Kühn
EFFECTS OF POLLUTION-RELEVANT MAGNETITE NANOPARTICLES ON MAMMALIAN BRAIN CELLS
Ishwarjeet Udham Singh Dhillon, Emily Hill, Rafael Cavalieri Marchi, Peter J. Sadler, Joanna F. Collingwood, Saskia E. Bakker, Jake Brooks
MITOCHONDRIAL EPIGENETIC ALTERATIONS IN HUMAN ASTROCYTES EXPOSED TO FINE PARTICULATE MATTER
Chiara Villa, Andrea Stoccoro, Marialuisa Lavitrano
PRENATAL PARTICLE EXPOSURE ENHANCES PERSISTENT INWARD CURRENTS IN MIDDLE AGED MICE
Monika Rothmann, Ulla Vogel, Peter Møller, Claire Meehan, Karin Sørig Hougaard
EFFECT OF CARBONACEOUS NANOPARTICLES ON THE STRUCTURE AND OLIGOMERIZATION OF AΒ42
Masakazu Umezawa, Yuta Takahashi, Naoya Sakaguchi, Samal Kaumbekova