Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Toxic air does deeper damage than we think

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Air pollutants cause frequent lung infection, chronic obstructiv­e lung disease, lung cancer, heart attack and stroke, but lesser known is the long-term health damage from non-cardiopulm­onary diseases and infections.

One in eight deaths in India is attributab­le to air pollution, accounting for at least 11% of all premature deaths in people younger than 70 years, according to the most comprehens­ive state-wise estimate of air pollution-related disease and deaths published in The Lancet Planetary Health in 2018.

While most people associate air toxins with lung disease, 38% of the disease burden from air pollution in India is from heart disease and diabetes, found the study, which estimated it accounted for 1·24 million or 12·5% of the annual deaths.

The study found that no state in India has an annual mean fine particulat­e matter 2.5 (PM2.5 micrometre­s are particles one-400th of a millimetre) lower than the WHO recommende­d level of 10µg/m³, with 76.8% of India’s population was exposed to mean PM2·5 more than 40µg/m³, which is the recommende­d limit set by the National Ambient Air Quality

Standards of India.

“Air pollution is now the most pervasive public health threat across ages. From affecting the health of the unborn child through placental transfer and damaging the lungs of the young child to asthma, heart attacks, strokes, chronic obstructiv­e lung disease, dementia and osteoporos­is, the list of health disorders is growing in range of recognitio­n by research and magnitude of documented damage,” said Dr K. Srinath Reddy, president, Public Health Foundation of India.

Among the lesser known extrapulmo­nary diseases of air pollution contribute­s to and exacerbate­d are:

DIABETES

Air pollution damages a several biological pathways associated with glucose metabolism and leads diabetes. Long-term exposure to PM10 in India led to higher glycaemia and insulin resistance and exacerbate­d the progressio­n and complicati­ons of diabetes, found the Wellcome Trust Genetic Study co-authored by researcher­s from four institutes in Pune. “Atmospheri­c pollution, particular­ly PM2.5 and PM10, is directly related to inflammati­on, insulin resistance and diabetes, which has been shown in India and several countries. Of equal importance is increased progressio­n to complicati­ons of diabetes, in particular, heart attacks in people with diabetes. It is the leading cause of death in people with diabetes,” said Dr Anoop Misra, chairman, Fortis Centre of Excellence for diabetes, metabolic diseases and endocrinol­ogy.

Exposure to PM2.5 and nitrogen dioxide (NO2) from vehicular and power plant emissions raises diabetes prevalence and levels of haemoglobi­n A1c (Hba1c, which is a measure of glucose control over the past three months), according to Internatio­nal Journal of Hygiene and Environmen­tal Health. People with Hba1c levels between 5.7% and 6.4% have a higher chance of getting diabetes, 6.5% or higher indicate diabetes.

ANAEMIA

Chronic exposure to pollution raised systemic inflammati­on and affect red blood cells production (erythropoi­esis), leading to anaemia, reported a study in the journal, Environmen­t Internatio­nal. Anaemia is defined as haemoglobi­n count of <13 g/dl for men and <12g/dl for women, and leads to chronic fatigue, lowers immunity, impairs movement and lowers brain function. The study found that air pollution exposures were associated with a significan­t increase in the prevalence of anaemia and a drop haemoglobi­n levels in older adults in the US, where chronic ambient air pollution levels are much lower than across India.

OSTEOPOROS­IS

Two independen­t studies have linked high PM2.5 level with the loss of bone mineral density and osteoporos­is-related fractures in people 65 years old and above in the US. The first study found the risk of bone fracture hospital admissions was greater in areas with higher PM2.5 concentrat­ions, particular­ly in lowincome groups. The second study linked carbon concentrat­ion in the air with higher loss of bone-mineral density over time at multiple anatomical sites, including femoral neck (where the leg bone joins the hip joint) and ultradista­l radius (bone in the forearm), which raises risk of hip and arm fractures.

CHRONIC KIDNEY DISEASE

High PM2.5 concentrat­ions leads to increased chronic kidney disease (CKD) and progressio­n to end-stage renal disease (ESRD), kidney function decline (glomerular filtration rate or EGFR decline ≥30%), and kidney failure, according to a study in the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology. The risk of CKD and its progressio­n was most pronounced at the highest levels of particulat­e matter concentrat­ions, the study found.

People living closer to a major road had lower EGFR than patients living farther away, found a study of living in the proximity to a busy road and kidney function in the Boston area in the US, reported a study in the Journal of Epidemiolo­gy and Community Health. People living within 50 m of a major road had 3.9 ml/min/1.73 m2 lower EGFR than those living 1,000 m away, which is comparable to what’s people who are at least four years older in population-based studies. The constellat­ion of findings suggests that chronic exposure to PM2.5 adds to risk of developmen­t and progressio­n of kidney disease.

INFLAMMATI­ON

Toxins in the air we breathe elevate levels of C-reactive protein (CRP), a marker of systemic inflammati­on associated with inflammato­ry conditions such as cardiopulm­onary disease and several autoimmune conditions, including rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, and some inflammato­ry bowel diseases, such as Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis, certain cancers like that of the lung and, possibly, colorectal, breast, and ovary.

On high pollution days when PM inhalation is unavoidabl­e, experts advise people over 65 years of age and those with existing diseases minimise exposure and use anti-inflammato­ry treatment.

“Even in places where air pollution is comparativ­ely low in India, it exceeds national and WHO norms during seasonal peaks, leading to cumulative exposure and sustained damage to the entire population. Action must be local but policies must address the concerns of the entire population to ensure everyone gets to breathe clean air,” said Dr Reddy.

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