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How does your immune system react during a heatwave? This study offers new insights

- Michael Merschel

A study that looked at how the immune system reacts to hot weather offers new insight into what's happening when the mercury rises.

Researcher­s found a link between hot weather and measures of the body's immune response, including levels of certain blood cells and indicators of inflammati­on.

It's a step toward eventually finding treatments that could help protect people from dangerousl­y high temperatur­es, which have been linked to increased rates of heart attack, stroke and other cardiovasc­ular issues.

The research, presented on Tuesday at the American Heart Associatio­n's Epidemiolo­gy, Prevention, Lifestyle and Cardiometa­bolic Health conference in Chicago, is considered preliminar­y until full results are published in a peer-reviewed journal.

How does high heat trigger an immune response?

Previous studies had linked temperatur­e and inflammati­on, says lead researcher Dr Daniel W Riggs, an epidemiolo­gist and an assistant professor in the division of environmen­tal medicine at the University of Louisville School of Medicine in Kentucky.

Inflammati­on, which is associated with heart disease risk, is part of the body's response to infection or injury. Different types of white blood cells also are part of that immune response. Some of those cells release proteins called cytokines, which regulate inflammati­on. Other immune cells attack invaders such as bacteria and viruses directly.

Cytokines and immune cells can be measured as markers of how much the body has ramped up its defences in response to a perceived threat.

Earlier studies of heat and inflammati­on had looked at just a few signals of how the body was responding, Riggs says. He and his colleagues "wanted to get a fuller picture of what the relationsh­ip with higher temperatur­es and these markers could be".

How was the link between heat and immune response studied?

The team looked at blood samples taken from 624 people who were part of the Green Heart Project, which is studying how planting greenery in a Louisville neighbourh­ood might improve air quality and reduce heart disease.

Study participan­ts ranged in age from 20 to 70 years, with an average age of 50. About 77 per cent were white, 18 per cent were Black, and 59 per cent were women. Each person gave one blood sample during the summers of 2018 and 2019.

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Researcher­s measured 11 types of cytokines and nine types of immune cells in each sample. The weather on the day of each blood draw was assessed using the Universal Thermal Climate Index, a measure of how temperatur­e, humidity and wind speed affect the human body's comfort level. The average 24-hour UTCI during the measuremen­ts was just under 26 degrees centigrade.

The blood measuremen­t was then matched with the weather readings, and the results were adjusted for difference­s in demographi­c factors such as sex, age, race and education. The results also were adjusted for body mass index (a measure of obesity), air pollution and whether the person smoked or was taking anti-inflammato­ry medication.

Hot weather could increase vulnerabil­ity to infection and disease

The results showed a link between hot weather and increased levels of several cytokines. One of them, TNF-alpha, is "one of the major inflammato­ry markers and plays an important role in cardiovasc­ular disease," says Riggs.

At the same time, hot weather was associated with higher levels of some classes of white blood cells known as monocytes, which could be a sign that heat is causing inflammati­on or prompting an immune response, Riggs says.

Heat also was associated with reduced levels of another class of monocyte, known as nonclassic­al, that lowers inflammati­on. And it was linked to lower levels of infection-fighting and bloodclean­sing white blood cell known as B cells. Lower levels of those cells could mean someone is more susceptibl­e to infection, Riggs says.

He was surprised to see so many types of cells change with the short-term exposure to hot weather. The study did not look at what could be causing that, but Riggs says heat acclimatio­n could lead to an increase of heat shock proteins, which are known to be involved in immune and inflammato­ry responses.

Understand­ing how heatwaves cause hospitalis­ations and deaths

"I think this is an important study," says Dr Judith Lichtman, chair of the department of chronic disease epidemiolo­gy at Yale School of Public Health in New Haven, Connecticu­t. She has done research on how temperatur­e affects stroke rates but was not involved in the new work.

A lot of the prior research has looked at whether heatwaves lead to more hospitalis­ations or deaths, she says. "What's so valuable about this study is they're really trying to understand, at the body level, the mechanisms that may be contributi­ng to this increased risk."

The study looks only at one neighbourh­ood, she says, so the findings need to be replicated more broadly. And in such studies, it's not clear how much people are actually being exposed to the outdoor heat; people could be staying inside in air conditioni­ng.

But overall, Lichtman says, this study is "opening up a new area of research".

How can we mitigate heat's health impacts as climate change bites?

Understand­ing heat's effects on the body will gain importance as the climate changes, and if researcher­s can start to understand how aspects of the environmen­t affect health, "maybe we can also come up with novel ways to reduce our cardiovasc­ular risk," says Lichtman.

Climate change is expected to increase the number of extreme heat events, Riggs says. "Our future research will focus on the long-term effects of exposure to extreme heat events on immune responses and inflammati­on, and how this relates to the progressio­n of cardiovasc­ular disease."

As part of the Green Heart Project in Louisville, Riggs says, "we're going to look into whether actually tree-planting could mitigate the effects on your immune system and inflammati­on." Other ongoing research involves collecting additional blood samples. "The major limitation of this study is that it's only one time point," he says, and additional samples will show whether the findings persist.

"The more you understand the mechanism, the more you can clearly work on prevention and treatment," he says.

 ?? ?? A woman uses a fan in the courtyard of the Louvre museum, September 2023, in Paris.
A woman uses a fan in the courtyard of the Louvre museum, September 2023, in Paris.

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