According to recent research done by  University of Pittsburgh experts, those who live in locations with greater  levels of air pollution made up of chemicals linked to industrial sources and  vehicular traffic have a higher risk of dying from a disease that causes lung  scarring but has no known cause.
        The study, which was published in JAMA  Internal Medicine, is the first to establish a connection between worsening  fibrotic interstitial lung disease (fILD) outcomes and the chemical makeup of  fine particulate air pollution. Additionally, it is the largest study yet  conducted to gauge how these individuals are affected by air pollution.
        "Some people with these lung diseases have an  expected lifespan from diagnosis to death of only a few years, and yet it's a  mystery as to why they developed the disease, why their lungs become so  scarred," said lead author Gillian Goobie, M.D., doctoral candidate in the Pitt  School of Public Health's Department of Human Genetics. "Our study points to  air pollution – specifically pollutants from factories and vehicles – as  potentially driving faster disease progression and premature death in these  patients." 
        Goobie and her team obtained data from 6,683  patients with fILDs in the U.S. and Canada and linked their home addresses with  satellite and ground-monitoring air pollution data to determine air pollutant  composition to an accuracy of less than half a mile.  
        The team specifically looked at a pollutant  known as PM2.5, which refers to particulate matter that measures less than 2.5  microns across, a size invisible to the naked eye. This type of pollution is so  small that it can infiltrate deep into the lungs and even cross into the blood  stream, where it can contribute to other diseases outside of the lungs, such as  heart disease. 
        "In the past, most environmental health  research has focused on the simple definition of PM2.5 as anything of that  size," said co-author James Fabisiak, Ph.D., associate professor in Pitt Public  Health's Department of Environmental and Occupational Health. "But PM2.5 is  chemically diverse, with a different composition depending on whether it came  from a forest fire or a tailpipe. Research has lacked in determining if the  type of PM2.5 matters when it comes to health effects. Our new research is a  big step toward filling in that knowledge gap." 
        The team found that increasing levels of PM2.5  were linked to more severe disease at diagnosis, faster disease progression as  measured by lung function decline and higher likelihood of dying sooner.  Pollution high in sulfate (typically produced by factories, such as the coal  and steel industries), nitrate (primarily from fossil fuel combustion) and  ammonium (usually produced by industry or agriculture) were associated with  worse outcomes, whereas chemical signatures from more naturally occurring  particulate matter – such as sea salt or soil dust – didn't carry as high of an  association.  
        After pollution leaves a smokestack or  tailpipe, Goobie noted that sulfate- and nitrate-containing aerosols can be  formed in the atmosphere from those and other gaseous pollutants and can be  acidic, which can be very damaging to the tiny air sacs of the lungs.  
        The team is now doing laboratory studies  looking at the impact of these pollutants on lung cells at the molecular level  to better understand why they are particularly damaging to the lungs of certain  people and whether exposure to the pollutants triggers changes to how certain  genes work that could cause runaway scarring. 
        According to the team's calculations, if  exposure to industrial pollutants hadn't occurred, most premature deaths among  participants living in areas of North America with a heavier burden of industry  – including Pittsburgh – could have been avoided. Participants of color were  disproportionately exposed to higher levels of man-made air pollutants: 13% of  the high-exposure group were non-white, but only  8% of the low-exposure group, highlighting  the impact of environmental injustice in these findings as well. 
        Co-senior author S. Mehdi Nouraie, M.D.,  Ph.D., associate professor of pulmonary, allergy and critical care medicine at  Pitt's School of Medicine, said that the findings further emphasize the need  for people with lung conditions that make them more vulnerable to pollution to  pay attention to the air quality index – a forecast of air pollution – and  consider minimizing time outdoors or in rooms without good air filtration  during poor air quality days. 
        "Ultimately, we want to encourage a  data-driven awareness," Nouraie said. "We want people to think about the  quality of the air we breathe. Patients, health care providers and policymakers  can all use the new information we're providing to try to improve health  outcomes. When you make the air safe for the most vulnerable to breathe, you're  making it safe for all of us." 
        Ref:
     Gillian  Goobie, et al,JAMA Internal Medicine,DOI:10.1001/jamainternmed.2022.4696 
                         
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