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Wildfire smoke linked to increased risk of dementia, study says

cigaretteman

HR King
May 29, 2001
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As some of the worst wildfires in modern history ravage parts of Canada and the United States this summer, scientists are eager to understand the effects of wildfire smoke on human health. Now, an alarming study has found that people living in areas with persistent exposure to wildfire smoke may have higher risks of developing dementia later in life.


In the western United States, there are regions where half of people’s annual exposure to fine particulate pollution is caused by wildfire smoke, said Sara Adar, an environmental epidemiologist at the University of Michigan and an author of the new study, published Aug. 14 in JAMA Internal Medicine.
“And we know that wildfire smoke is becoming more frequent and more severe,” she said.
After the blaze, coping with ‘fire brain’
Wildfires incinerate everything in their path, emitting a mixture of fine particles that may be more neurotoxic than particles originating elsewhere, added the study’s lead author, Boya Zhang, a research fellow in environmental epidemiology at the University of Michigan.



It is scientifically well-known that inhaling microscopic particles floating in the air can cause a host of serious health problems. Scientists are most concerned about particles known as PM2.5, which are less than 2.5 micrometers wide (the width of a human hair ranges from 50 to 70 micrometers). These tiny particles can bypass our respiratory system’s defenses, enter the bloodstream and travel to vital organs, including the brain.
Particulate pollution has been associated with neurodegenerative diseases such as dementia, but whether specific PM2.5 sources are part of this link had not been thoroughly explored. The new study takes the next step by shedding light on how different particulate pollution sources can have varying levels of risk.
“I think this is the next direction we need to go in,” said Marc Weisskopf, an environmental epidemiologist at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health who was not involved in the study. “We need to know if there are certain [PM2.5] sources that really impact dementia so we can figure out what to regulate and where.”



Zhang and her team cognitively assessed nearly 30,000 Americans age 50 and older living throughout the country, using data collected between 1998 and 2018 for the federally funded Health and Retirement Study. None of the participants had dementia at the start of the study, and follow-ups were conducted every two years to track if there had been changes in their health.

To estimate the participants’ exposure levels, the scientists combined the health data with model estimates of PM2.5 from different sources, including agriculture, road traffic, industry, windblown dust and wildfires. They first simulated the total PM2.5 in the air and treated that as a baseline. Then, one by one, they turned off each source and subtracted the new estimate from the baseline to calculate the source-specific contribution.
To weed out other risk factors that could affect their results, Zhang and her collaborators accounted for characteristics in the study participants such as age, sex and race.
Soybeans are harvested near Wamego, Kan., in October 2019. (Charlie Riedel/AP)
The researchers estimated that nearly 188,000 new cases of dementia every year were attributable to total PM2.5 exposure in the United States. After they adjusted for other risk factors, the team found that only wildfire smoke and agricultural emissions were linked to the disease

 
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