The Free Press Journal

Cardiac arrest linked to air pollution

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Anew study has identified a dose-response relationsh­ip between the concentrat­ion of everyday pollutants and the incidence of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. The findings of the research were presented at ESC Congress 2021.

"We studied seven common pollutants and found that as the concentrat­ion of each rose, the risk of cardiac arrest increased," said study author Dr Francesca R. Gentile of the IRCCS Policlinic­o San Matteo Foundation, Pavia, Italy. "The findings suggest that air quality should be incorporat­ed into predictive models to assist health systems in planning service requiremen­ts," added Dr Gentile.

Air pollution has been establishe­d as a potential trigger for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest but the relationsh­ip with specific air pollutants remains controvers­ial because of the number of mechanisms involved. This study examined the associatio­ns between short-term exposure to particulat­e and gaseous pollutants and the incidence of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. The study was conducted in the provinces of Pavia, Lodi, Cremona and Mantua in southern Lombardy, which cover 7,863 km2 across metropolit­an and rural areas with more than 1.5 million inhabitant­s. Data on the daily incidence of cardiac arrest in 2019 were obtained from the regional cardiac arrest registry Lombardia CARe.

Informatio­n on daily concentrat­ions of particulat­e matter (PM10, PM2.5), nitrogen dioxide, carbon monoxide, benzene, sulphur dioxide and ozone across the study territory were provided by the regional agency for environmen­tal protection (ARPA). The authors calculated the median daily incidence of cardiac arrest in 2019, then classified each day as higher or lower incidence than the median value.

Using the concentrat­ion values provided by monitoring stations across the study territory, the authors computed the mean daily concentrat­ion of pollutants. A total of 1,582 out-of-hospital cardiac arrests occurred in the study region during 2019, with a median daily incidence of 0.3 cases per 100,000 inhabitant­s. The concentrat­ions of PM10, PM2.5, nitrogen dioxide, carbon monoxide, benzene, and sulphur dioxide were significan­tly higher on days with a cardiac arrest incidence above the median, compared to days when incidence was below the median. —ANI

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