The study, published in the journal Lancet Planetary Health
this month, observed 9.2 million people across seven years and found
that even small increases in air pollution correlated with an increase
in hospital admissions for bone fractures.
A smaller analysis of 692 middle-aged
, low-income adults in Boston saw
that higher levels of pollution and black carbon left patients with
lower parathyroid hormones — a hormone related to calcium and bone
health — and lower bone mineral density than those in lesser polluted
areas.
“Decades of careful research has documented the health risks of air
pollution, from cardiovascular and respiratory diseases to cancer, and
impaired cognition, and now osteoporosis," said senior author Dr. Andrea
Baccarelli, of Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health, in the Telegraph.
Among the many benefits of clean air, our research suggests, are
improved bone health and a way to prevent bone fractures," Baccarelli
said.
The study notes that while air pollution is already a risk factor for
mortality, it is now noted to be a risk for osteoporosis. The
researchers also said that once an older person experiences a fracture,
they have a higher risk of mortality, and are also at increased risk for
future fractures and chronic pain.
There are approximately 2 million osteoporosis-related fractures in the
U.S. each year. Many people don’t experience symptoms until they have a
bone fracture.
Lahore, Pakistan, and New Delhi, India, are two places this week facing smog and pollution crises. Lahore has been under a cloud of smoke for nearly two weeks and New Delhi was referred to in the New York Times as a "gas chamber.”
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