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Diesel Exhaust Fumes Affect People With
Asthma, Finds Study On London's Oxford Street
The new study looked at the effects on 60 people with
mild and moderate asthma of walking along the western
end of busy Oxford Street in London, where only diesel-powered
taxis and buses are permitted.
The researchers, from Imperial College London, the
New Jersey School of Public Health, and other international
institutions, found that both during and after a two
hour walk along Oxford Street, the test volunteers
experienced increased asthmatic symptoms, reduced lung
capacity, and inflammation in the lungs. It took a
few hours for these to return to their normal levels.
The researchers confirmed their results by comparing
how the same people were affected by a two hour walk
in the traffic-free, western part of London's Hyde
Park. Here, the volunteers experienced some of the
same problems but to a far lesser degree.
This is the first study to investigate in a real-life
setting, outside of the laboratory, if traffic fumes
make symptoms worse for people with asthma. Two thirds
of people with asthma believe this to be the case,
according to Asthma UK.
The researchers believe that diesel exhausts cause
problems for people with asthma because of the particulates
- minute particles of dust, dirt, soot and smoke -
which they release into the air. Particulates come
in different sizes but those of less than 2.5 microns,
and the tiniest "ultra fine" ones, can interfere
with the respiratory system, because they are so tiny
that they can be inhaled deeply into the lungs. Ultra
fine particles can also be absorbed in the blood, which
may have damaging effects.
The researchers found a correlation between the level
of diesel exhaust particulates at street level during
the two walks and reductions in lung capacity and increases
in lung inflammation in the volunteers.
Diesel engines emit lower concentrations of carbon
monoxide and carbon dioxide than petrol engines, but
they can generate over 100 times more particles per
distance travelled than similar sized petrol engines,
and are major contributors to particulate pollution
in the atmosphere. Previous studies have shown that
in urban environments, almost 90 per cent of traffic-generated
particulate matter is from diesel exhausts.
Professor Fan Chung, from the National Heart and Lung
Institute at Imperial College London and one of the
authors of the study, said: "Our study illustrates
the need to reduce pollution in order to protect people's
health. For the first time we are able to measure exactly
what's happening inside the lungs of people with asthma
when they spend only a couple of hours strolling in
a real-life polluted area. By observing the effect
of pollutant diesel particles on the lung surfaces,
we can confirm that such an exposure causes inflammation
in the lungs of asthmatic people.
"Our study should not necessarily deter asthmatic
people from venturing into Oxford Street, but different
measures to reduce the levels of pollution, and to
protect the lungs of asthmatic people from the effects
of pollution, should be considered," added Professor
Chung.
The researchers measured air quality in the study
areas and found more than three times as many ultra
fine particles on Oxford Street compared with Hyde
Park (65,229 pt/cc vs 18,298 pt/cc). The researchers
also found that Oxford Street had more than three times
as much nitrogen dioxide in the air (80.8 vs 20.9 micrograms
per cubic metre) and six times as much elemental carbon
(12.4 vs 2.0 micrograms per cubic metre).
The researchers measured lung function; symptoms;
exhaled nitric oxide and condensate from the breath;
bronchial reactivity; sputum and blood. They took measurements
before, during and after the volunteers' walks.
While the changes that were reported in their study
were relatively modest, the researchers would now like
to investigate the cumulative effects of exposure to
these diesel fumes over time and to look at the effects
of pollution on other conditions such as cardiovascular
disease. They also want to look into whether the treatments
currently available to combat asthma are able to reduce
the effects of exposure to diesel exhausts on the lungs,
for example by analysing if it is possible to reduce
these effects by using an inhaler or tablets before
going for a walk in a polluted area.
Professor Chung is a Principal Investigator in the
MRC-Asthma UK Centre in Allergic Mechanisms of Asthma
at Imperial College London and King's College London,
which was set up in 2005 to tackle severe asthma caused
by allergies. The study was supported by the Health
Effects Institute in Boston. |