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Study Shows
Metals in Air Aggravate Asthma and Allergies
May 30, 2003
Marla Cone
Los Angeles Times
Microscopic pieces of metals in air pollution aggravate
asthma and allergies, according to research by the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency and German scientists published
this week.
The researchers concluded that people
who live in areas with airborne soot that contains a lot
of metals are prone to more severe bouts of asthma and allergic
symptoms.
Evidence has been mounting in recent years
that soot -- ultra-fine particles of pollution -- aggravates
asthma and allergies. The new study implicates a specific
ingredient of the soot -- metals, such as zinc, copper,
tin and cadmium. The metals are most often found in emissions
from factories and coal-burning plants.
Asthma is considered an epidemic in the
U.S., afflicting an estimated 15 million people, including
5 million children.
For their study, EPA and German scientists
examined air from two neighboring cities in East Germany,
Hettstedt and Zerbst. Hettstedt, which has a high rate of
bronchitis, allergies and wheezing among schoolchildren,
is home to smelters and mines. It has several times more
toxic metals in the air than the nonindustrial, farming
area of Zerbst.
When lab mice with allergies were exposed
to airborne particles from Hettstedt, they had more inflammation
of their airways and worsened allergic symptoms than animals
exposed to particles from Zerbst, according to the research,
directed by Stephen Gavett of the EPA's National Health
and Environmental Effects Research Laboratory in North Carolina.
Although the concentration of particle pollution was similar
in both cities, the content of some metals in Hettstedt
was as much as sevenfold higher.
Apparently, tiny pieces of metals cause
airways to become inflamed, restricting the flow of air
that reaches the lungs. Such symptoms can lead to asthma
attacks. The metals also increased the animals' sensitivity
to common allergens -- substances such as dust or pollen
that cause allergic symptoms.
There was no evidence, however, that soot
causes the diseases in people who don't already suffer them.
When mice that were not allergic were exposed, they had
no symptoms. Instead, the metals exacerbated symptoms in
mice with existing allergies.
Gavett concluded that timing is critical
to determine how severe someone's symptoms will be. When
mice breathed the metals right before being exposed to an
allergen, their airway inflammation worsened.
Scientists have been trying to figure
out why deaths from respiratory and heart diseases increase
on days when particle pollution worsens. The phenomenon
occurs around the world. Some researchers have suspected
that metals in the air are responsible, and the new findings,
published in the journal Environmental
Health Perspectives, bolster that theory.
Scientists acknowledge that there are
other causes of asthma and allergy symptoms.
Diesel exhaust and ozone, which is the
main ingredient of smog, aggravate asthma and allergies.
But diesel engines put out little, if any, metals.
The rate and severity of asthma among
children, especially those under 5, has surged over the
last 25 years in the United States and Europe, even though
most forms of air pollution have declined. The reason for
the increase is unknown. Officials are investigating several
possible culprits, from sensitivity to indoor air allergens
to a reaction of the immune system of infants to specific
types of pollution, especially diesel exhaust and ash from
coal plants.
Allergies have also increased dramatically.
In 9 of every 10 cases, people with asthma also suffer allergies.
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