Does working in an extremely cold environment affects lung function?: 10 years follow‑up

Abstract

Objective The aim of this study is to investigate whether there is an association between brief but repeated exposures to extremely cold temperatures over many years and pulmonary function.
Methods We performed a retrospective analysis of the data collected over 10 years in the context of the extended medical examinations of storeworkers exposed to extremely cold temperatures. We considered forced vital capacity (FVC), forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1), Tifeneau-Pinelli index (FEV1/FVC), CO difusion capacity (DL,CO) and Kroghfactor (CO difusion capacity relative to recorded alveolar volume, DL,CO/VA) reported as %-predicted. We analysed trends in outcome parameters with linear mixed models.
Results 46 male workers participated in at least two extended medical examinations between 2007 and 2017. Overall 398 measure points were available. All lung function parameters had values above the lower limit of normality at the frst examination. In the multivariate model including smoking status and monthly intensity of cold exposure (≤16 h/month vs.>16 h/
month) FEV1%-predicted and FVC %-predicted had a statistically signifcant positive slope (FEV1, 0.32% 95% CI 0.16% to 0.49% p<0.001; FVC 0.43% 95% CI 0.28% to 0.57% p<0.001). The other lung function parameters (FEV1/FVC %-predicted, DL,CO %-predicted, DL,CO/VA %-predicted) showed no statistically signifcant change over time.
Conclusions Long term intermittent occupational exposure to extreme cold temperatures (-55 °C) does not appear to cause irreversible deleterious changes in lung function in healthy workers, thus the development of obstructive or restrictive lung diseases is not expected.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN0340-0131
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 09.2023