Scottish Daily Mail

‘Safe’ levels of pollution still damage baby brain in the womb

- By Victoria Allen Science Correspond­ent

CHILDREN exposed to even ‘safe’ levels of air pollution in the womb have brain abnormalit­ies and are less able to focus.

A study has found school-age children’s brains may be changed by fumes which come from traffic on city roads.

Aged six to ten, children exposed to air pollution as unborn babies find it harder to concentrat­e and avoid distractio­n.

MRI scans show the outer layer of their brains are thinner in areas related to selfcontro­l. The changes were seen in children whose mothers experience­d air pollution within safe EU limits.

Lead author Dr Monica Guxens, from the Barcelona Institute for Global Health, said: ‘This finding adds to previous studies that have linked acceptable air pollution levels with other complicati­ons including cognitive decline and foetal growth developmen­t. Therefore, we cannot warrant the safety of the current levels of air pollution in our cities.’

Dr John Krystal, editor of the journal Biological Psychiatry in which the study is published, said: ‘Air pollution is so obviously bad for lungs, heart, and other organs that most of us have never considered its effects on the developing brain.

‘But perhaps we should have learned

‘We should have learned from smoking’

from studies of maternal smoking that inhaling toxins may have lasting effects on cognitive developmen­t.’

The results are taken from scans of 783 children in the Netherland­s, whose mothers’ exposure to air pollution was taken by monitoring campaigns.

Measuremen­ts were taken of nitrogen dioxide, which comes mainly from traffic, especially diesel vehicles, and coarse and fine pollution particles.

A link was found between children exposed to fine particles in the womb and a thinner outer layer of the brain, called the cortex, in several regions.

The study suggests these brain abnormalit­ies contribute to difference­s in selfcontro­l over temptation­s and impulsive behaviour which were seen in the children.

The average residentia­l levels of fine particles in the study were well below the current acceptable limit set by the EU – only 0.5 percent of the pregnant women in the study were exposed to levels considered unsafe. The average residentia­l levels of nitrogen dioxide were right at the safe limit.

The foetal brain is particular­ly vulnerable during pregnancy as it hasn’t yet developed the mechanisms to protect against or remove environmen­tal toxins. The findings of the study suggest that exposure to levels even below those considered safe could cause permanent brain damage.

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