Association Between Air Pollutants and Infectious Epiglottitis Incidence: A Observational Study
Pengcheng Yu, Rui Fang, Chao Xue

TL;DR
This study finds that higher levels of PM2.5 air pollution are linked to more cases of infectious epiglottitis in Shanghai.
Contribution
The study identifies a novel association between PM2.5 and infectious epiglottitis incidence using hospital data and air quality metrics.
Findings
PM2.5 levels showed a significant 4.1% increase in hospital visits for infectious epiglottitis per 10 μg/m³ rise.
PM2.5 had a significant association with hospital visits at a 1-day lag (RR = 1.041).
Other pollutants like SO2 and NO2 did not show significant associations with epiglottitis cases.
Abstract
Infectious epiglottitis is inflammation of epiglottis and surrounding structures and may be life‐threatening without treatment. Air pollution is a critical risk factor for human health. This study aims to explore the correlation between infectious epiglottitis and air pollutants. We collected the daily infectious epiglottitis cases in our hospital and the daily meteorological data, including average temperature, relative humidity, and the daily concentrations of air pollutants of Shanghai, China, from January, 2015 to December, 2019. Air pollutants include particulate matter (PM2.5 and PM10), sulfur dioxide (SO2) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2). Generalized additive Poisson regression models were applied to assess the association between the corresponding pollutants and hospital visits for infectious epiglottitis. A total of 3280 infectious epiglottitis cases were identified with 1.80…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOtolaryngology and Infectious Diseases · Tracheal and airway disorders · Infective Endocarditis Diagnosis and Management
