while previous studies have linked reproductive issues and a range of other conditions — including obesity and diabetes — to the harmful substances inhaled by humans, the current research, conducted on mice and published in the journal environmental health perspectives , uncovers the mechanism at work and offers hope for future intervention.
“our findings showed that the damage due to air pollution — at least to the sperm count — could be remedied by removing a single inflammation marker in the brains of mice, suggesting that we may be able to develop therapies that could prevent or reverse the damaging effects of air pollution on fertility,” said zhekang ying , lead author of the study and an assistant professor of medicine at the university of maryland school of medicine.
according to health canada, air pollution contributes to roughly 15,300 premature deaths in the country every year at a total annual economic cost in the neighbourhood of $120-billion — the equivalent of six per cent of canada’s 2016 gross domestic product. around 92 per cent of the global population lives in areas of the world where the level of fine particles in the air smaller than 2.5 micrometers in diameter exceeds the safety standards established by the world health organization. such particles are typically produced by industrial facilities, car emissions and wildfires.
advertisement
advertisement
dave yasvinski is a writer with healthing.ca