Study: Air
Pollution may Promote Heart Disease
Tiny particles combined with a fatty diet
damages cardiovascular system
MSNBC.com
Wenesday, December 21, 2005
CHICAGO - Breathing polluted air found in urban
areas promotes heart disease, especially when
accompanied by a fatty diet, researchers who
tested the theory on mice said on Tuesday.
The animal study was aimed at determining how air
pollution — specifically small airborne particles
spewed by car exhaust and power plants — combined
with a high-fat diet sped up the deterioration of
the body's cardiovascular system.
"We established a causal link between air
pollution and atherosclerosis," said the study's
lead author, Lung Chi Chen of New York
University's School of Medicine.
Airborne particles smaller than 2.5 microns
across — 1/40th the width of a human hair — are
believed to penetrate deep into the lungs and
damage the body's cardiovascular system,
exacerbating the buildup of plaque that narrows
arteries and makes them less flexible and prone to
inflammation. Such deterioration makes people ripe
for a heart attack or stroke.
Some estimates blame the tiny airborne particles
from dust, soot and smoke for 60,000 premature
U.S. deaths each year, according to the report
published in the Journal of the American Medical
Association.
In the six-month study, which was funded in part
by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 28
mice bred to be susceptible to cardiovascular
disease were divided into four groups.
The mice that breathed air polluted with 15
micrograms per cubic meter of small particulates —
comparable to the air quality in urban areas like
New York and within EPA limits — fared worse than
mice that breathed clean, filtered air.
The arteries of mice that breathed bad air and
were fed a high-fat diet were 42 percent blocked
with plaque. Those that were fed a high-fat diet
but breathed clean, filtered air were 26 percent
blocked. Blockages were also apparent in mice fed
a normal diet, with polluted air increasing the
amount of plaque.
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