Bangkok Post

Air pollution found in placentas

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Black carbon particles typically emitted by vehicle exhaust and coal-fired power plants have been detected on the foetus-facing side of placentas, researcher­s have said.

The concentrat­ion of particles was highest in the placentas of women most exposed to airborne pollutants in their daily life, according to a study in Nature Communicat­ions.

“Our study provides compelling evidence for the presence of black carbon particles originatin­g from air pollution in human placenta,” the authors said.

The findings, they added, offer a “plausible explanatio­n for the detrimenta­l health effects of pollution from early life onwards”.

Air pollution is known to have potentiall­y devastatin­g impacts on children’s health.

The biggest risk is for low birth weight, which in turn increases the odds for diabetes, asthma, stroke, heart disease and a host of other conditions.

But the biological explanatio­n for how and why air pollution poses such a threat to newborns has long puzzled doctors.

“The new study sheds some light on this by showing that inhalation of black carbon particles can accumulate in the placenta,” commented Christine Jasoni, director of the Brain Health Research Centre at the University of Otago in New Zealand, commenting on the study.

Scientists led by Tim Nawrot at Hasselt University in Diepenbeek, Belgium postulated that “black carbon particles are able to translocat­e from the mothers’ lungs to the placenta”.

Nawrot and his team used high-resolution imaging to examine the placentas of 23 full-term and five pre-term births.

Women who had been exposed to higher levels of black carbon particles — averaging 2.42 microgramm­es per cubic metre — showed significan­tly higher levels of particles in the placenta than ten mothers exposed to a quarter as much.

Critically, traces of black carbon were found on the inward-facing side of the placenta, putting them in direct in contact with the developing foetus.

There was no evidence, however, of pollution particles in the foetus itself, suggesting the placenta may act as a barrier to the toxins.

Children are particular­ly vulnerable to poor air quality during foetal developmen­t, when exposure can result in lifelong changes to developmen­t as well as permanent damage to lung tissue.

More than 90% of children live in environmen­ts where the outdoor concentrat­ion of airborne pollutants exceed World Health Organizati­on guidelines.

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