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Indoor
Pools May Cause Childhood Asthma
Excerpt
By
Adam Marcus,
HealthScoutNews
Indoor swimming pools could be a major source of childhood asthma.
That's the conclusion of a new
study by Belgian scientists who found that exposure to a byproduct
of chlorine used to disinfect pools damages the lungs and could
be associated with an increased risk of asthma in children who
swim a lot.
Previous studies have found a link
between breathing problems and swimmers and lifeguards, who spend
a great deal of time in and around pools. But the latest work
is the first to suggest that recreational indoor swimming might
also raise the risk of asthma.
"There seems to be an association,
particularly when the children are very young," says Alfred
Bernard, a professor of toxicology at Catholic University of Louvain
in Brussels, and leader of the research. "They can't swim,
so they maximize their exposure" to the dangerous byproduct,
a gas called nitrogen trichloride.
The good news, Bernard says, is
that the potential problem has a simple solution -- indoor pools
must have proper ventilation. "It's just a question of ventilating
the pool," he says. "There is almost no gas outside."
A report on the study appears in
the June issue of Occupational and Environmental Medicine,
a British health journal.
Another step that could greatly
cut down on the amount of nitrogen trichloride released in pools
is to make sure bathers are clean before they step into the water,
and to keep young children from leaving their own liquids -- urine,
sweat, saliva -- behind.
"All the byproducts come from
the interaction of chlorine with organic matter," Bernard
says.
In Brussels, indoor public pools
are closed if they fail to meet air-quality standards. Bathers
are also required to shower before entering the water.
In their study, Bernard's group
measured blood levels of lung and immune system proteins in 226
children without asthma who'd been swimming at indoor pools. They
also looked for changes in lung proteins in a smaller group of
children and adults after they went swimming at a chlorinated
pool. And they compared asthma rates and pool use in almost 1,900
other children who had participated in an asthma survey in the
mid and late 1990s.
Dr. James Martin, a physician at
Montreal's McGill University, has studied chlorine's effects on
the lungs in occupational settings, such as paper mills, where
the gas is used. "Sometimes workers are accidentally exposed
to chlorine, they get a blast of it, and they can get asthma permanently,"
he says. The latest work seems to show that indoor pools may pose
a similar threat through repeated exposure to the toxin, he says.
Bernard says it's unclear how much
exposure to chlorine might explain childhood asthma rates, which
are climbing in industrialized countries. More studies in this
area are needed, he adds.
More information
To learn more about asthma, visit
the American Academy
of Allergy Asthma and Immunology or the American
Lung Association.
Reference
Source 101
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