Ozone Exposure can Lead to Heart Attacks
– ‘ + google_ads[0].line2 + ‘
‘; } else if (google_ads.length > 1) { s += ‘
Study participants showed evidence of vascular inflammation, a potential reduced capability to dissolve artery-blocking blood clots, and changes in the autonomic nervous system that controls the heart’s rhythm. The changes were temporary and reversible in these young, healthy participants.
Ground level ozone is created when pollutants from vehicles, power plants, industry, chemical solvents and consumer products react in the presence of sunlight. Recent epidemiology studies have reported associations between acute exposure to ozone and death but little is known about the underlying pathophysiological pathways responsible.
“This study provides a plausible explanation for the link between acute ozone exposure and death,” stated Robert B. Devlin, Ph.D., the study’s lead author and senior scientist at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) National Health and Environmental Effects Research Laboratory in Research Triangle Park, N.C.
Devlin and colleagues focused on a single, short-term exposure and not the effects of years of exposure to ozone.
Researchers exposed 23 volunteers, ages 19 to 33, to 0.3 parts per million (ppm) of ozone. The dose was higher than the EPA’s eight hour ozone standard of 0.076 ppm. However, a person breathing 0.3 ppm for two hours receives roughly the same amount of ozone as does a person breathing the lower 0.076 ppm for eight hours, Devlin noted.
Study participants underwent two controlled exposures one to clean air and one to ozone-polluted air at least two weeks apart. During each exposure, participants alternated 15-minute periods of stationary cycling and rest.
None of the participants reported complaints or physical symptoms after inhaling clean air or ozone. However, immediately following and the morning after ozone inhalation, tests showed significant ozone-induced vascular changes compared to clear-air exposure. These changes included:
Increase in blood levels of interleukin 1beta, a signature marker of inflammation that appears to play a key role in heart disease.Decrease in plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 and plasminogen, components that play an important role in dissolving blood clots that may form along arterial walls.A change in heart rhythm, indicating modified autonomic nervous system control of heart rate.
Epidemiology studies have also associated acute exposure to another ubiquitous air pollutant, particulate matter (PM), with death in elderly people with cardiovascular disease. Particulate matter is little airborne particles that can be inhaled into the lungs. Controlled exposure studies of both humans and animals have described PM-induced changes that are very similar to those described in this ozone study, suggesting that both pollutants may be causing death by affecting similar pathways, the researchers said.
The World Health Organization estimates 2 million people worldwide, mostly elderly people with cardiovascular disease, die because of acute exposure to air pollution. The EPA puts the yearly U.S. toll at 40,000-50,000 deaths.
“People can take steps to reduce their ozone exposure, but a lot of doctors do not realize this,” Devlin said.
Related News:
- Novel therapeutic advancement in search for heart muscle progenitor cells: New hope for heart attack patients
- Flu Vaccines May Protect the Heart Too
- Weight Loss Does Not Lower Heart Disease Risk from Type 2 Diabetes
- Haryana Plans To Set Up More Cardiac Care Units
- Cardiac Dimensions commences commercialization of CARILLON mitral contour system in Europe
- Move Over Olive Oil!
- Move Over Olive Oil!
- Heart Healthy Supplement?
- NIH Pilot Study Shows Feasability of MRI to Guide Heart Catheter Procedures
- Increased risk of heart failure and cardiovascular death linked to thickening of heart’s right ventricle
Details :
Submited at Wednesday, June 27th, 2012 at 12:30 am on Uncategorized by chuck
Comment RSS 2.0 - leave a comment - trackback


