| Literature DB >> 33507239 |
Michael Brauer1,2, Barbara Casadei3, Robert A Harrington4, Richard Kovacs5, Karen Sliwa6.
Abstract
Although the attention of the world and the global health community specifically is deservedly focused on the COVID-19 pandemic, other determinants of health continue to have large impacts and may also interact with COVID-19. Air pollution is one crucial example. Established evidence from other respiratory viruses and emerging evidence for COVID-19 specifically indicates that air pollution alters respiratory defense mechanisms leading to worsened infection severity. Air pollution also contributes to co-morbidities that are known to worsen outcomes amongst those infected with COVID-19, and air pollution may also enhance infection transmission due to its impact on more frequent coughing. Yet despite the massive disruption of the COVID-19 pandemic, there are reasons for optimism: broad societal lockdowns have shown us a glimpse of what a future with strong air pollution measures could yield. Thus, the urgency to combat air pollution is not diminished, but instead heightened in the context of the pandemic. The article has been co-published with permission in the European Heart Journal, the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, Circulation, and Global Heart.Entities:
Keywords: Air pollution; CVD; Cardiovascular disease; Climate; Environmental health impacts
Year: 2021 PMID: 33507239 PMCID: PMC7953955 DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehaa1025
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Heart J ISSN: 0195-668X Impact factor: 29.983
Figure 1Ranking of air pollution relative to other leading risk factors for global mortality. Mortality risk factors, Both sexes, all ages, 2019. Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation. (Adapted from Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, 2020).
Figure 2Biological pathways linking air pollution with cardiovascular disease. Mechanisms of cardiovascular disease attributable to air pollution exposures. (Adapted from Rajesh Vedanthan and Michael Hadley, 2019).