A possible association between a common component of urban air pollution and tuberculosis has been determined in a recent study.
A possible association between a common component of urban air pollution and tuberculosis has been determined in a recent study. In their finding, a team of researchers, led by Dr. Stephan Schwander, of the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey - School of Public Health (UMDNJ-SPH) scientists in describe that exposure to diesel exhaust particles (DEP) suppresses the function of phagocytic immune cells (a type of white blood cells that ingest foreign particles, such as bacteria) on a cellular level.
They conclude that this exposure probably causes exposed individuals to be less able to fight off new Mycobacterium tuberculosis infections or to suppress a reactivation of a latent infection by these bacteria.
"In laboratory experiments using DEP generated from an automobile diesel engine as model air pollutant particles, and blood samples gathered from 20 healthy individuals, we demonstrated that exposure to DEP makes cells less responsive," Schwander said.
"The cells, in effect, became desensitized to stimulation with the bacteria that cause TB.
"This effect was even greater in cells that had prior exposure to DEP than in those that had concurrent DEP and Mycobacterium tuberculosis exposure," he said.
Tuberculosis is estimated to afflict approximately 8-10 million people and to cause 1.5 million deaths each year worldwide.
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"Because there is already epidemiological evidence that connects tuberculosis to cigarette smoking and some forms of indoor air pollution, it seemed logical to look at outdoor air pollution for a similar correlation.
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The study has been published in the Journal of Immunology.
Source-ANI