Indoor Air Pollution Tied to Asthma, Asthma-Related Symptoms – Monthly Prescribing Reference

Indoor Air Pollution Tied to Asthma, Asthma-Related Symptoms
Monthly Prescribing Reference
(HealthDay News) — Indoor air pollution, specifically mold and environmental tobacco smoke, is associated with asthma and asthma-related respiratory symptoms in middle-aged adults, according to a study published online February 12 in Respirology.

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OBSTRUCTIVE LUNG DISEASE AND EXPOSURE TO BURNING BIOMASS FUEL IN THE INDOOR ENVIRONMENT.

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OBSTRUCTIVE LUNG DISEASE AND EXPOSURE TO BURNING BIOMASS FUEL IN THE INDOOR ENVIRONMENT.

Glob Heart. 2012 Sep 1;7(3):265-270

Authors: Diette GB, Accinelli RA, Balmes JR, Buist AS, Checkley W, Garbe P, Hansel NN, Kapil V, Gordon S, Lagat DK, Yip F, Mortimer K, Perez-Padilla R, Roth C, Schwaninger JM, Punturieri A, Kiley J

Abstract
It is estimated that up to half of the world’s population burns biomass fuel (wood, crop residues, animal dung and coal) for indoor uses such as cooking, lighting and heating. As a result, a large proportion of women and children are exposed to high levels of household air pollution (HAP). The short and long term effects of these exposures on the respiratory health of this population are not clearly understood. On May 9-11, 2011 NIH held an international workshop on the “Health Burden of Indoor Air Pollution on Women and Children,” in Arlington, VA. To gather information on the knowledge base on this topic and identify research gaps, ahead of the meeting we conducted a literature search using PubMed to identify publications that related to HAP, asthma, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Abstracts were all analyzed and we report on those considered by the respiratory sub study group at the meeting to be most relevant to the field. Many of the studies published are symptom-based studies (as opposed to objective measures of lung function or clinical examination etc.) and measurement of HAP was not done. Many found some association between indoor exposures to biomass smoke as assessed by stove type (e.g., open fire vs. liquid propane gas) and respiratory symptoms such as wheeze and cough. Among the studies that examined objective measures (e.g. spirometry) as a health outcome, the data supporting an association between biomass smoke exposure and COPD in adult women are fairly robust, but the findings for asthma are mixed. If an association was observed between the exposures and lung function, most data seemed to demonstrate mild to moderate reductions in lung function, the pathophysiological mechanisms of which need to be investigated. In the end, the group identified a series of scientific gaps and opportunities for research that need to be addressed to better understand the respiratory effects of exposure to indoor burning of the different forms of biomass fuels.

PMID: 23139916 [PubMed – as supplied by publisher]

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Indoor line-drying: Good for your wallet but bad for your health? – Mother Nature Network (blog)


Daily Mail

Indoor line-drying: Good for your wallet but bad for your health?
Mother Nature Network (blog)
A study conducted by the Mackintosh School of Architecture finds that hanging clothing indoors to dry during the winter can pose health risks to those suffering from respiratory ailments such as asthma. Mon, Nov 05 2012 at 1:00 PM EST. Clothing being
Hang-drying laundry inside your home may trigger allergiesNew York Daily News
Drying laundry indoors can be bad for health: ResearchersTimes of India
Drying Clothes Inside Poses Health RisksStudent Operated Press
WebMD.Boots.com –Daily Mail –The Consumerist
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Lung Association Awarded Grant to Help WNY Residents Improve Indoor Air … – ReadMedia (press release)

Lung Association Awarded Grant to Help WNY Residents Improve Indoor Air
ReadMedia (press release)
The foundation of the MHE program is the collaboration between an MHE trained volunteer and the resident that has a child with asthma. The MHE volunteer performs an integrated, no cost in-home assessment to evaluate the presence of pesticides,

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Students with asthma exposed to higher levels of indoor allergens at urban schools – Pediatric SuperSite

Students with asthma exposed to higher levels of indoor allergens at urban schools
Pediatric SuperSite
Urban children with asthma are exposed to more mouse, dog and cat allergens at school than at home, according to a study presented at the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology 2012 Annual Meeting. Researchers analyzed settled dust and

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