A recent research has found yet more evidence to suggest
that there is a strong link between traffic pollution and asthma in
young children.
Led by various scientists , the study analyzed data
from 1,522 children to assess the effect of long-term exposure to air
pollution on asthma.
The children’s mothers were already enrolled in a long-term study, which gave the researchers access to comprehensive
medical, socio-economic and demographic information, including their
residential address history.
The team also used mapping technologies to measure the distance
between each child’s home address and the nearest major roadway, and
calculated the children’s daily exposure to fine particulate matter.
Also known as PM 2.5, fine particulate matter are tiny particles
suspended in the air measuring 2.5 micrometers or smaller. When inhaled,
these small particles, which come from fuel combustion, including
traffic and power plants, deposit in the lungs.
In addition, the team also looked at the children’s daily exposure to
soot, a component of fine PM also known as black carbon, which
originates from incompletely burned fossil fuels which from car engines
(especially diesel) and power plants.
The results showed that living close to a major road was linked to
childhood asthma in all ages examined in the study, with the team
finding that children living less than 100 meters from a major road were
nearly three times more likely to experience asthma symptoms or use
asthma medications daily by ages seven to 10, compared with those who
lived more than 400 meters away.
In addition, the team also found that lifetime exposure to black
carbon and fine PM were also linked to the asthma in early childhood
(ages three to five years).
“Younger children spend a larger proportion of their time at home
than school-aged children, and their airways are smaller and may be more
likely to wheeze in response to pollution,” commented corresponding
author. “This may explain why pollution exposure was most
consistently linked to asthma in young children.”
However the team were surprised to find that in mid-childhood (ages
seven to 10 years), these pollutants were associated with asthma only
among girls, with the author adding that, “Future work will need to
investigate whether girls are more susceptible to pollution than boys.”
A French study published just last month also found that long-term
exposure to outdoor air pollution can increase the risk of asthma
symptoms in adults, while previous research has also found that children
exposed to coarse particulate matter, which is larger than fine
particulate matter, are more likely to develop asthma and need hospital
care than children who are unexposed.
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Labels: asthma, black carbon, burned fossil fuels, exposure, fine particulate matter (PM2.5), soot, strong link, traffic pollution, young children
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