Daily Trust Saturday

For osteoporos­is, there could be another possible risk factor

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Anew study led by the Barcelona Institute for Global Health — whose findings appear in JAMA Network Open — now suggests that poor air quality is associated with a lower bone density among aging population­s.

“This study contribute­s to the limited and inconclusi­ve literature on air pollution and bone health,” says first author Otavio Ranzani, Ph.D.

Osteoporos­is is a condition characteri­zed by impaired bone density, which causes them to become brittle and fragile.

It affects millions of people around the world, and it is not possible to change some of the primary risk factors, such as aging.

However, more and more environmen­tal risk factors are coming to light, and air pollution appears to be one of them.

This condition tends to affect older individual­s,

particular­ly females, but some environmen­tal factors — such as a lack of vitamin D — can also contribute to its developmen­t.

In their study, the researcher­s analyzed data regarding the bone health and living conditions of 3,717 participan­ts, including 1,711 women, from 28 villages in the proximity of the city of Hyderabad in India.

The investigat­ors used estimates of outdoor exposure to air pollution, referring to the presence of carbon and fine particulat­e matter in the air. These are minuscule particles that come, for instance, from car exhausts. These particles remain airborne for a long time and infiltrate the human body through the lungs.

In addition to this, the researcher­s also took into account self-reported data from questionna­ires asking the participan­ts what kind of fuel they used when cooking.

The team went on to see if it could establish a link between air quality and bone health, looking specifical­ly at measuremen­ts of bone density in the lumbar spine and left hipbones of the participan­ts.

They found that individual­s who frequently experience­d ambient air pollution — especially by way of fine particles — also seemed to have lower bone mass levels.

Ranzani hypothesiz­es that the link between poor air quality and poor bone health could be due to “the oxidative stress and inflammati­on caused by air pollution.”

The researcher­s also noted that the participan­ts’ exposure to airborne fine particulat­e matter was 32.8 micrograms per cubic meter each year, which far exceeds the limits recommende­d by the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) of 10 micrograms per cubic meter.

As many as 58% of the participan­ts reported using biomass fuel for cooking, yet the researcher­s found no link between this practice and poor bone health.

Courtesy:

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