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Studies
Shed Light on
'Economy Class Syndrome'
Some air travelers have a higher risk
than others of developing blood clots during long flights, a phenomenon
sometimes called "economy class syndrome," according to studies
recently published.
One report from Italy's University
of Milano concluded that air travel is a "mild risk factor for
venous thromboembolism" in general, with passengers who have risk
factors such as genetic predisposition, recent surgery or the
use of birth control pills at greater danger.
Genetic factors can include a lack
of certain proteins in the blood that normally help prevent or
break up clots. Other risk factors include recent surgery, cancer
and pregnancy. Oral contraceptives have long been known to increase
the risk of blood clots in general.
Venous thromboembolism is the formation
of blood clots in veins. The clots can form in the legs and travel
to the lungs, causing severe problems and even death.
While the extent of the risk from
air travel remains controversial, some airlines advise passengers
to stretch or do in-seat exercises with their legs to keep blood
circulating properly. And while the problem has been characterized
as one involving cramped quarters in economy class seating, some
experts say it can hit in any class of seat if the passenger is
too sedentary.
The Italian study, published in
the Archives of Internal Medicine, found that the risk of such
clots in patients with genetic or other risk factors and who had
traveled by air in the past month was 16 times higher compared
to patients without risk factors. Women using oral contraceptives
who traveled by air in the past month were 13 times as likely
to develop the clotting problem, it said.
A second study from Germany's University
of Dresden Medical School looked at 964 passengers who had been
on flights longer than eight hours and compared them with another
group who had not flown.
Venous blood clots were found in
27, or 2.8 percent, of the air passengers and in 12, or 1 percent,
of the non-flyers.
"Long-haul flights of eight hours
and longer double the risk for isolated calf muscle venous thrombosis,"
the study said.
But it also said flight-associated
blood clot cases found "occurred exclusively in passengers with
well-established risk factors" such as those mentioned in the
Italian study.
Reference
Source 89
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