A New study that appears in
the journal Circulation looks
at the effects of low levels of pollution on the anatomy of the heart.
Living next to a busy road may cause
you serious heart problems, a new study suggests.
The perils of air pollution are real
and plentiful. Two years ago, a study published in The Lancet Neurology claimed that air pollution was one of
the leading risk
factors for stroke worldwide.
Also, even low levels of pollution
seem to be very harmful. Medical
News Today recently reported on a study that
linked levels of air pollution deemed "safe" by the Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) with a high risk of diabetes.
Now, Steffen Petersen — a professor
of cardiovascular medicine at Queen Mary University of London in the United
Kingdom — has led a new study that suggests that low levels of air pollution
may cause changes in the heart that are similar to those seen in heart failure.
Dr. Nay Aung, who is also affiliated
with Queen Mary University, is the first and corresponding author of the paper.
Air
pollution may cause heart enlargement
Dr. Aung and colleagues examined
data on over 3,900 healthy people enrolled in the UK Biobank study.
The participants volunteered
information about their health, residential area, and lifestyle, and they
allowed the researchers to take measurements of their hearts' size, weight, and
function using MRI.
The study revealed a strong
correlation between living next to a busy road and therefore being exposed to
nitrogen dioxide (NO2) and developing enlarged right and left heart ventricles.
The researchers note that ventricle
enlargement of this type is often seen in the early stages of heart failure.
Furthermore, Dr. Aung and team found
a dose-response relationship between pollution exposure and changes in
heart anatomy.
Using fine
particulate matter (PM2.5) to measure air pollution particles,
the scientists found that the heart ventricles enlarged by 1 percent for every
microgram of PM2.5 per cubic meter and for every 10 micrograms per cubic meter
of NO2.
Air
pollution just as important as cholesterol
Dr. Aung comments on the findings,
saying, "Although our study was observational and hasn't yet shown a
causal link, we saw significant changes in the heart, even at relatively low
levels of air pollution exposure."
"Air
pollution should be seen as a modifiable risk factor," the first author
adds.
"Doctors and the general public all need to be aware of
their exposure when they think about their heart health, just like they think
about their blood pressure,
their cholesterol, and their weight."
Dr.
Nay Aung
"Our future studies," says
Dr. Aung, "will include data from those living in inner cities like
Central Manchester and London, using more in-depth measurements of heart
function, and we would expect the findings to be even more pronounced and
clinically important."
Prof. Jeremy Pearson, the associate
medical director at the British Heart Foundation — a nonprofit organization
that partially funded the study — also weighs in on the findings.
"We can't expect people to move
home to avoid air pollution," he says. "Governments and public bodies
must be acting right now to make all areas safe and protect the population from
these harms."
No comments:
Post a Comment