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" HSI - Jenny Thompson " <hsiresearch

HSI e-Alert - Up in the Air

Tue, 21 Mar 2006 06:50:00 -0500

 

 

 

HSI e-Alert - Up in the Air

 

Health Sciences Institute e-Alert

****************************************************

March 21, 2006

 

 

Dear Reader,

 

Imagine a particle of soot so small that thirty particles placed side

by side would be about the same width as a human hair.

 

Environmentalists call this a " fine particle. " It's measurement is PM

2.5; particulate matter equal to or less than 2.5 microns in diameter.

But put enough of those fine particles of soot in the air we breathe

and the result is not so fine at all. In fact, for older people the

results may be deadly.

 

-----------

Particle response

-----------

 

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) maintains a national

monitoring network known as AIRS: the Aerometric Information Retrieval

Service. This network measures air quality factors, including fine

particles generated by power plants and automobile exhaust.

 

In a recent study partly funded by the EPA, researchers from Johns

Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health assessed potential health

risks of short-term exposure to fine particles, which can deeply

penetrate the respiratory tract.

 

The Hopkins team compared daily AIRS data collected throughout the

U.S. between 1999 and 2002. This data was compared with hospital

admission records from the same time period for more than 11 million

Medicare patients. Researchers specifically looked for hospital

admissions that were prompted by a variety of cardiovascular and

respiratory problems, including coronary heart disease, heart failure,

stroke, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and respiratory infection.

 

Results revealed a short-term increase in hospital admissions for all

of these conditions on days when levels of PM 2.5 were elevated. The

most significant association was for heart failure.

 

In a press release from the National Institute for Environmental

Health Sciences, lead researcher Francesca Dominici, Ph.D., stated

that most of the spikes in hospital admissions occurred on the same

day as the rise in fine particle concentration, suggesting " a short

lag time between the change in pollution and the subjects' response. "

 

-----------

Air quality...right now

-----------

 

Dr. Dominici noted that it's not yet known exactly what

characteristics of fine particles produce adverse reactions. She also

stated that a national air quality standard needs to be established to

protect respiratory health.

 

We'll leave the cause and effects mystery of fine particles to

researchers, and future air quality standards to the EPA. For our

purposes the Hopkins study points up the importance of those air

quality alerts that are often included in local weather reports,

especially in the summer when oppressive conditions sometimes trap and

contain unhealthy air at ground level.

 

But you don't have to wait for your local news broadcast to find out

what the air quality is like in your area. Dozens of local and federal

government agencies have pooled their air quality measurement

resources in support of a web site called Air Now (airnow.gov). This

site lists current air quality index (AQI) information for towns and

cities throughout the country. For instance, last Friday (3/17/06) you

could have visited Air Now to find out that the PM 2.5 reading for

Port Angeles, WA, was " moderate, " which is considered safe for

" sensitive groups. "

 

The Air Now site is easy to navigate and provides a clear, daily

snapshot of the AQI across the nation and in your community.

 

************************

 

....and another thing

 

In a recent e-Alert we heard from several HSI members who weighed in

on a study that tested saw palmetto (species name: Serenoa repens).

The study found the herbal extract to be ineffective in treating 63

men who had moderate-to-severe symptoms of enlarged prostate, caused

by benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH).

 

Aside from the fact that many previous studies have found saw palmetto

to be effective in managing BPH prostate enlargement, members pointed

out that the dosage used in this new study was low, and the subjects

had symptoms more severe than the typical symptoms that saw palmetto

has been shown to successfully address.

 

In other words: Let's remove the baby from the basin BEFORE we throw

out the bathwater.

 

After reading that e-Alert, HSI Panelist Allan Spreen, M.D., sent

along this insightful comment about Proscar, a popular drug that

treats BPH: " Proscar is a patented version of Serenoa repens. Funny

they'd do so much work to make a drug out of something that doesn't work. "

 

To Your Good Health,

 

Jenny Thompson

 

****************************************************

 

Sources:

 

" Fine Particulate Air Pollution and Hospital Admission for

Cardiovascular and Respiratory Diseases " Journal of the American

Medical Association, Vol. 295, No. 10, 3/8/06, jama.ama-assn.org

" Elderly Have Higher Risk for Cardiovascular, Respiratory Disease From

Fine Particle Pollution " National Institute for Environmental Health

Sciences press release, 3/8/06, niehs.nih.gov

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