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Air pollution linked to autoimmune disease: Research


Nepalnews
ANI
2022 Mar 16, 15:55, New Delhi [India]
This photo shows 'New Delhi Air Pollution' taken on 15 November 2019. Photo Credit: Prami.ap90

According to new research, long-term exposure to air pollution is linked to a heightened risk of autoimmune disease, particularly rheumatoid arthritis, connective tissue, and inflammatory bowel diseases.

The research was published in the journal, 'RMD Open'.

Environmental air pollution from vehicle exhaust and industrial output can trigger adaptive immunity-whereby the body reacts to a specific disease-causing entity. But sometimes this adaptive response misfires, prompting systemic inflammation, tissue damage, and ultimately autoimmune disease.

Examples of autoimmune diseases include rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, inflammatory bowel diseases, such as ulcerative colitis; connective tissue diseases, such as osteoarthritis and multiple sclerosis.

Both the incidence and prevalence of these conditions have steadily increased over the past decade, the reasons for which aren't entirely clear. And whether air pollution is linked to a heightened risk of autoimmune disease remains a matter of debate, say the researchers.

To try and shed some light on the issues, the researchers mined the national Italian fracture risk database (DeFRA) and retrieved comprehensive medical information on 81,363 men and women submitted by more than 3500 doctors between June 2016 and November 2020.

Most were women (92 percent) with an average age of 65, and 17866 (22 percent) had at least one co-existing health condition.

Each participant was linked to the nearest air quality monitoring station run by the Italian Institute of Environment Protection and Research via their residential postcode.

The researchers were particularly interested in the potential impact of particulate matter (PM10 and PM2.5). Levels of 30ug/m3 for PM10 and 20ug/m3 for PM2.5 are the thresholds generally considered harmful to human health.

Some 9723 people (12 percent) were diagnosed with an autoimmune disease between 2016 and 2020.

Information on air quality was obtained from 617 monitoring stations in 110 Italian provinces. The average long-term exposure between 2013 and 2019 was 16 ug/m3 for PM2.5 and 25 ug/m3 for PM10.

Exposure to PM2.5 wasn't associated with a heightened risk of an autoimmune disease diagnosis. But PM10 was associated with a 7 percent heightened risk for every 10ug/m3 increase in levels, after accounting for potentially influential factors.

Long-term exposure to PM10 above 30 ug/m3 and to PM2.5 above 20 ug/m3 was associated with, respectively, a 12 percent and 13 percent higher risk of autoimmune disease.

And long term exposure to PM10 was specifically associated with a heightened risk of rheumatoid arthritis, while long-term exposure to PM 2.5 was associated with a heightened risk of rheumatoid arthritis, connective tissue diseases, and inflammatory bowel diseases.

Overall, long-term exposure to traffic and industrial air pollutants was associated with an approximately 40 percent higher risk of rheumatoid arthritis, a 20 percent higher risk of inflammatory bowel disease, and a 15 percent higher risk of connective tissue diseases.

This is an observational study, and as such, can't establish cause. And the researchers acknowledged several limitations which might have affected their findings.

These include the lack of information on the dates of diagnosis and start of autoimmune disease symptoms that air quality monitoring might not reflect personal exposure to pollutants and that the findings might not be more widely applicable because study participants largely comprised older women at risk of fracture.

But air pollution has already been linked to immune system abnormalities, and smoking, which shares some toxins with fossil fuel emissions, is a predisposing factor for rheumatoid arthritis, they explained.

rheumatoid arthritis connective tissue inflammatory bowel diseases Air pollution study Research NepalNews
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