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Traffic
Pollution Linked
to Severe Asthma Attacks
Excerpt
By Patricia
Reaney,
Reuters Health
Asthmatic children exposed to traffic pollution before getting
a viral infection have more serious asthma attacks, doctors said
on Friday.
In children, about 80 percent of
attacks are due to viruses -- most of them from the common cold
virus.
Researchers at St Mary's Hospital
in Portsmouth, southern England have discovered that exposure
to nitrogen dioxide (NO2) from vehicle exhaust exacerbates the
attacks.
"It drops the lung function and
increases the symptoms after a virus infection. It can increase
symptoms by as much as 200 percent," said Dr. Anoop Chauhan, a
pulmonologist at the hospital.
NO2 is common but the main sources
indoors are gas stoves and, outdoors, traffic pollution.
Chauhan and his team measured the
personal exposures of 114 asthmatic children between the ages
of 8-11 from non-smoking families over almost a whole year. They
found a strong relationship between higher NO2 pollution and the
severity of an attack.
With up to 150 million people worldwide
suffering from asthma and cases expected to rise by 50 percent
every 10 years, Chauhan said the findings reported in The Lancet
medical journal could have important public health implications.
"These effects are occurring at
levels (of pollution) that are currently considered to be safe
by international quality standards. So it has an important bearing
on what we should set as targets for air quality," Chauhan said
in an interview.
Asthma affects the airways -- small
tubes that carry air in and out of the lungs. It occurs when the
tubes swell up and go into spasm, blocking the free passage of
air in and out of the lungs.
People with the illness suffer
from coughs, wheezing and shortness of breath. A very severe attack
may kill. Colds, the flu, cigarette smoke, pollen, stress and
pollution can trigger an asthma attack. There is no cure for asthma
but it can be controlled with drugs.
"We know viruses trigger asthma
exacerbation but this is another step forward because it tells
us that pollution makes it (the attack) far worse than it should
be," said Chauhan.
"Maybe we should be looking at
controlling air pollution to perhaps reduce the number of severe
attacks of asthma."
Reference
Source 89
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