Living in a densely polluted environment is as bad as eating a high-fat diet. Apart from causing heart-related conditions like stroke, and heart attack, air pollution can cause metabolic impairments like insulin resistance and diabetes.
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‘Taking actions such as wearing an N95 mask, using portable indoor air cleaners, utilizing air conditioning, and changing car air filters frequently could all be helpful in staying healthy and limiting air pollution exposure.’
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Researchers found that air pollution was a “risk factor for a risk factor” that contributed to the common soil of other fatal problems like heart attack and stroke. Similar to how an unhealthy diet and lack of exercise can lead to disease, exposure to air pollution could be added to this risk factor list as well. ![twitter](https://images.medindia.net/icons/news/social/twitter.png)
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“In this study, we created an environment that mimicked a polluted day in New Delhi or Beijing,” said Sanjay Rajagopalan, MD, first author on the study, Chief of Cardiovascular Medicine at University Hospitals Harrington Heart and Vascular Institute, and Director of the Case Western Reserve University Cardiovascular Research Institute. “We concentrated fine particles of air pollution, called PM2.5 (particulate matter component < 2.5 microns). Concentrated particles like this develop from human impact on the environment, such as automobile exhaust, power generation, and other fossil fuels.”
These particles have been strongly connected to risk factors for disease. For example, cardiovascular effects of air pollution can lead to heart attack and stroke. The research team has shown exposure to air pollution can increase the likelihood of the same risk factors that lead to heart disease, such as insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes.
In the mouse model study, three groups were observed: a control group receiving clean filtered air, a group exposed to polluted air for 24 weeks, and a group fed a high-fat diet. Interestingly, the researchers found that being exposed to air pollution was comparable to eating a high-fat diet. Both the air pollution and high-fat diet groups showed insulin resistance and abnormal metabolism – just like one would see in a pre-diabetic state.
“The good news is that these effects were reversible, at least in our experiments” added Dr. Rajagopalan. “Once the air pollution was removed from the environment, the mice appeared healthier and the pre-diabetic state seemed to reverse.”
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Next steps in this research involve meeting with a panel of experts, as well as the National Institutes of Health, to discuss conducting clinical trials that compare heart health and the level of air pollution in the environment. For example, if someone has a heart attack, should they be wearing an N95 mask or using a portable air filter at home during recovery?
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Source-Eurekalert