Car engine particles linked to Alzheimer’s
Tiny magnetic fragments can travel into brain
• Tiny magnetic particles produced by car engines and brakes can travel into the human brain and may trigger Alzheimer’s disease, scientists have warned.
Researchers at Lancaster, Oxford and Manchester universities discovered microscopic spheres of the mineral magnetite in the brains of 37 people in Manchester and Mexico who had suffered neurodegenerative disease.
Magnetite is known to be toxic and is linked to the production of free radicals which are associated with Alzheimer’s disease. Although the mineral has previously been found in the brains of people who had died of Alzheimer’s, it was thought it occurred naturally.
However the tiny balls spotted by the scientists had a fused surface suggesting they had been formed under extreme heat, such as in a car engine.
Magnetite, a form of iron oxide, is known to be produced in car engines — particularly diesel engines which can emit up to 22 times more particulates than petrol engines — as well as when brakes are used, both by cars and trains. It can also be produced by open fires and poorly fitted stoves.
Researchers said the findings, published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, opened up a “whole new avenue” into the causes of Alzheimer’s disease, while charities said it offered “convincing evidence” that the toxic particles could get into the brain.
“Our results indicate that magnetite nanoparticles in the atmosphere can enter the human brain where they might pose a risk to human health, including conditions such as Alzheimer’s,” said lead author Barbara Maher of Lancaster University. “The particles we found are strikingly similar to magnetite nanospheres that are abundant in the airborne pollution found in urban settings, especially next to busy roads and which are formed by combustion or frictional heating from vehicle engines or brakes.”
David Allsop, an Alzheimer’s researcher at Lancaster University, added: “This finding opens up a whole new avenue for research into a possible environmental risk factor for a range of brain diseases.”
Last week, scientists reported that they have found a drug that appears to halt the progress of Alzheimer’s by clearing the sticky plaques from the brain which prevent brain cells communicating. But nobody knows what causes the plaques to form.
Air pollution has already been implicated in lung disease and heart attacks and a U.S. study in 2014 showed that people in highly polluted areas were 50 per cent more likely to suffer cognitive decline. But until now, nobody thought that the particles could reach the brain. The new research suggests the particles can be inhaled and enter the brain through the olfactory nerve.