Does Air Pollution Cause Asthma?
With asthma rates increasing, and pollution on the forefront of our minds, many of us like to blame pollution for the rise in asthma rates.
So is pollution
reallythe culprit, or is there something else going on?
Let's investigate.
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) recognizes two types of air pollutants that have been proven by various studies to affect asthma.
These are:
Ozone.
This is a naturally occurring gas in the earth's atmosphere to protect us from the sun's ultraviolet rays.
On the earth's surface it can mix with fumes from exhaust and can be harmful.
It's levels are higher on hot summer days, and therefore kids are more at risk because they tend to spend more time outside.
It's found mainly in smog.Particle matter:
These are tiny particles suspended in the air we breathe. This can be naturally occurring, such as from volcanoes, dust storms, fires, sea spray. It can also be man made, such as burning fossil fuels, power plant and industrial plant aerosols. Man made aerosols account for 10% of air pollution.
This is found in haze, smoke and dust.
According to a report by the EPA for healthcare professionals,
air pollutants trigger asthma because they injure the airway, cause inflammation, and increase airway reactivity to asthma triggers such as dust mites, molds, pollen and cockroach urine.
I believe the EPA here because I've seen the studies.
In fact, the latest study released shows a strong correlation between uncontrolled asthma and ozone and particulate matter pollution, according to
U.S.News.com/health, "Years of Air Pollution May Be Tied to Uncontrolled
Asthma."
Researchers studied five cities in France between 2003 and 2007 and concluded that "the risk of uncontrolled asthma was 69 percent higher among those with long-term exposure to ozone and 35 percent higher for those with long-term exposure to particulate matter."
Pollution looks like it mighttriggerasthma, and it may even make asthma worse. Yet does itcause
asthma?
Asthma researchers have surmised that constant exposure toanyirritant that causes airway inflammation may result in chronic (it's always there) inflammation -- which is asthma.
So can we nowassumeshort term exposure to pollutants may trigger asthma, and long-term exposure may cause asthma.
So it only makes sense that pollution should be blamed for rising asthma rates. Right?
Well, you'd think so, except for one important statistic that often gets ignored: pollution rates are on the decline, yet asthma rates have stayed the same or risen. So what's the deal?
Pollution is still considered to be a
major contributing factor to rising asthma rates in Western societies such as the U.S., U.K, and Australia.
Yet new evidence shows
asthma rates continue to rise (up 4.3 percent since 2001) "despite improved air quality throughout most of the country and widespread decreases in smoking," the LA Times reports.
Some asthma experts believe this might be proof something besides air pollution is causing asthma, like the
hygiene hypothesis or
microflora hypothesis.
I think we can safely conclude here that pollution is definitely an asthma trigger, yet whether it's a cause is still open to debate.
However, based on my own research,
I
thinkasthma has many causes
——空气污染包括在内。
这是我的理论;我受过良好教育的guess.
What do you think?