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Exploring the Link Between Air Pollution and Irregular Heartbeat

by Colleen Fleiss on May 1 2023 12:55 PM
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Air pollution modifies cardiac electrophysiological activities by stimulating oxidative stress and systemic inflammation, revealed study.

Exploring the Link Between Air Pollution and Irregular Heartbeat
Air pollution is a key risk factor for heart disease and linked to a higher risk of arrhythmia or irregular heartbeat, revealed researchers.
To determine whether there is a link, Chinese researchers evaluated hourly exposure to air pollution and the sudden onset of symptoms of arrhythmia using data from 2025 hospitals in 322 Chinese cities.

Air pollution in China is well above the World Health Organisation's guidelines for air quality, and the researchers conducted their analyses using air pollutant concentrations from monitoring stations closest to the reporting hospitals.

The risks occurred during the first several hours after exposure and could persist for 24 hours.

Pollution and the Heart Disease

"The exposure-response relationships between 6 pollutants and 4 subtypes of arrhythmias were approximately linear without discernable thresholds of concentrations," Chen noted in a study published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal (CMAJ).

The common arrhythmia conditions atrial fibrillation and atrial flutter, which can progress to more serious heart disease, affect an estimated 59.7 million people globally.

The study included 190,115 patients with acute onset of symptomatic arrhythmia, including atrial fibrillation, atrial flutter, premature beats (originating in either the atria or ventricles of the heart) and supra-ventricular tachycardia.

"Although the exact mechanisms are not yet fully understood, the association between air pollution and acute onset of arrhythmia that we observed is biologically plausible," the authors wrote.

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