The Sunday Guardian

City life leads to sinus problems, says report

- CORRESPOND­ENT

People living in places like New Delhi or Beijing may be at greater risk of developing chronic sinus problems due to high levels of air pollution in these cities, say researcher­s.

In the study, published in the American Journal of Respirator­y Cell and Molecular Biology, the researcher­s found evidence that breathing in dirty air directly causes a breakdown in the integrity of the sinus and nasal air passages in mice.

“In the US, regulation­s have kept a lot of air pollution in check, but in places like New Delhi, Cairo or Beijing, where people heat their houses with wood-burning stoves, and factories release pollutants into the air, our study suggests people are at higher risk of developing chronic sinus problems,” said Murray Ramanathan, Associate Professor at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.

Researcher­s have long known that smog, ash and other particulat­es from industrial smokestack­s and other sources that pollute air quality exacerbate and raise rates of asthma symptoms, but had little evidence of similar damage from those pollutants to the upper respirator­y system.

To see how pollution may directly affect the biology of the upper airways, the researcher­s exposed mice to either filtered air or polluted air.

The aerosolise­d particles, although concentrat­ed, were 30 to 60% lower than the average concentrat­ions of particles of a similar size in cities like New Delhi, Cairo and Beijing, the researcher­s said.

Nineteen mice breathed in filtered air, and 19 breathed polluted air for six hours per day, five days a week for 16 weeks.

The researcher­s used water to flush out the noses and sinuses of the mice, and then looked at the inflammato­ry and other cells in the flushedout fluid under a microscope. They saw many more white blood cells that signal inflammati­on, including macrophage­s, neutrophil­s and eosinophil­s, in the mice that breathed in the polluted air compared with those that breathed in filtered air.

When the researcher­s examined layers of cells along the nasal passages and sinuses under a microscope, they found that the surface layer -— or epithelium — was, notably, 30 to 40% thicker in mice that breathed in polluted air than in those that breathed filtered air. IANS

 ??  ?? Polluted air particles can lead to asthma.
Polluted air particles can lead to asthma.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India