Air Pollution - It Can Kill - FAST!
By Jeanie Lerche Davis
WebMD Medical News Reviewed By Charlotte Grayson, MD
on Tuesday, June 01, 2004
June 1, 2004 -- Air pollution increases the risk of heart disease, fatal heart attack, and abnormal heart
rhythms (arrhythmias). For people at high risk, a heart attack could occur just a few hours after exposure,
according to an expert panel.
The researchers' scientific statement, published by the American Heart Association, appears in the current
issue of the journal Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association. It is intended to provide
doctors and regulatory agencies (including the Environmental Protection Agency or EPA) with a comprehensive
review of the effects that air pollution has on heart disease.
Indeed, during the last decade, a growing body of evidence has led to heightened concern about the health
effects of air pollution, writes researcher Robert D. Brook, MD, a professor of cardiovascular medicine at
the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor.
Carbon monoxide, nitrous oxide, sulfur dioxide, ozone, lead, and particulate matter have all been linked
with increased hospitalizations and deaths caused by heart disease, he says.
One recent analysis was based on data from 90 large U.S. cities - showing air pollution caused a 21% increased
death rate overall, with 31% of increased deaths from heart and lung disease, Brook reports. This and other
studies show that air pollution may accelerate the development of atherosclerosis, or hardening of the
arteries -- the underlying process that causes heart disease.
Some of these effects, such as atherosclerosis, occur over time. These effects from pollution may also
happen abruptly, as with an irregular heartbeat or heart attack, he writes.
The Evidence
"There are several hundred published epidemiological studies linking air pollution with human illness," writes
Brook. "During the past 15 years, the magnitude of evidence and number of studies linking air pollution
to [heart disease] has grown substantially."
Among the evidence of harmful long-term effects:
A 16-year Harvard study of 8,111 adults living in six large cities found that overall death rate in the most
polluted city was 12% higher than in the least polluted city. Cardiovascular disease was the No. 1 cause of
death in this group. Cardiovascular diseases include conditions such as heart disease, heart attack, stroke,
and arrhythmias.
A 16-year study of 500,000 adults in all 50 states linked chronic exposure to air pollution with 6% increased
deaths from heart- and lung-related conditions and 8% more lung cancer-related deaths. That study was
conducted by the American Cancer Society.
About the short-term health risks:
A nationwide study of all 50 million people in the 20 largest U.S. cities showed higher death rates -- from
heart and lung disease as well as other causes -- on the day following the worst pollution days.
Regarding exposure to high levels of particle pollution, the panel concluded:
Prolonged exposure is a factor in reducing overall life expectancy by a few years.
Short-term exposure is associated with increased risk of death caused by a heart-related event such as heart
attack or heartbeat irregularity.
Elderly people with pre-existing, chronic lung disease, heart disease, or heart failure may be at especially
high risk during high-pollution days.
Smoking clearly increased the risk of death caused by heart failure and heart attack.
The toxins in air pollution put stress on a host of body systems -- sending damaging "free radicals"
throughout the body and triggering inflammation in the heart, blood vessels, and lungs, Brook explains.
This inflammation damages the body systems, causing cancer and heart disease.
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