Key Air Villains - Pollutant Posse
| Pollutant | Key Sources | Major Health Effects (Keywords) |
|---|---|---|
| $PM_{2.5}$ / $PM_{10}$ | Combustion, dust | Resp (asthma, COPD), CV (MI), Cancer. $PM_{2.5}$ deep lung penetration. |
| $CO$ | Incomplete combustion | Hypoxia (carboxyhemoglobin), Headache, Dizziness. 📌 "$CO$ knocks out $O_2$!" |
| $SO_2$ | Fossil fuel burning (coal) | Bronchoconstriction, Asthma exacerbation. |
| $NO_x$ (esp. $NO_2$) | High-temp combustion (vehicles) | Resp irritant, ↓ Lung function, Smog. |
| $O_3$ (ground-level) | Secondary ($NO_x$ + VOCs + Sunlight) | Lung damage, Asthma, Eye irritation. 📌 "Good up high, bad nearby." |
| Lead (Pb) | Old paint, industry | Neurotoxic (children), Anemia, Kidney damage. |
💡 Children under 5 are particularly vulnerable to PM2.5 exposure, with air pollution being a major contributor to pediatric mortality rates. Even relatively good air quality regions show significant health benefits from further PM2.5 reduction.
Lung Lament - Breathless Blues
- Inhalation of air pollutants (Particulate Matter [PM2.5, PM10], $SO_2$, $NO_x$, Ozone) inflames airways, leading to various respiratory conditions.
- Common Manifestations:
- Acute: Cough, wheezing, dyspnea, chest tightness.
- Exacerbations: Asthma, Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD).
- Chronic: Bronchitis, emphysema-like changes, ↑ lung cancer risk.
- Pneumoconiosis: From specific occupational dusts (e.g., silica, coal dust).
- Specific Pollutant Impacts:
- PM2.5: Deep lung penetration, systemic inflammation.
- $SO_2$: Potent bronchoconstrictor, asthma trigger.
- $NO_x$: NOx is a collective term for nitrogen oxides, primarily nitric oxide (NO) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2). NO2 is the most prevalent and concerning air pollutant among them, causing airway inflammation and ↑ infection susceptibility.
- $O_3$: ↓ Lung function, airway hyperreactivity.
- Diagnostic Clue:
- FEF-50%, FEF-75%, and PEFR are more significantly impaired by environmental pollution, particularly in relation to peripheral airway involvement, while FEV1/FVC ratio may not show significant differences.
⭐ Air pollution is a major trigger for asthma exacerbations and COPD, significantly impacting public health.
Heartache Haze - Cardio Calamity
- Major Culprits: Fine particulate matter ($PM_{2.5}$) & coarse particulate matter ($PM_{10}$), $NO_x$, $SO_2$, $CO$, $O_3$.
- Mechanisms of Damage:
- Systemic inflammation & widespread oxidative stress.
- Endothelial dysfunction (↓ vasodilation).
- Autonomic nervous system imbalance (e.g., ↓ Heart Rate Variability).
- Enhanced platelet aggregation & pro-thrombotic state (↑ thrombosis risk).
- Cardiovascular Outcomes:
- Acute events: Trigger for MI, stroke, unstable angina, arrhythmias.
- Chronic effects: Development/progression of HTN, atherosclerosis, IHD. ↑ Overall cardiovascular mortality.
- High-Risk: Elderly, diabetics, pre-existing heart or lung disease.
⭐ Even brief exposure (hours to days) to elevated air pollution levels is linked to an acute increase in the incidence of Myocardial Infarction and ischemic/hemorrhagic Stroke.
Brain to Babe - Pollution's Path
- Neurodevelopmental (Brain):
- Prenatal/early PM2.5, PAH, heavy metal exposure linked to:
- ↓Cognitive function, ↓IQ.
- ↑Risk of Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), ADHD.
- Pathways: Oxidative stress, neuroinflammation, direct toxicity.
- Prenatal/early PM2.5, PAH, heavy metal exposure linked to:
- Reproductive & Perinatal (Babe):
- Maternal exposure associated with:
- Low Birth Weight (LBW), Preterm Birth (PTB).
- Intrauterine Growth Restriction (IUGR).
- Mechanism: Pollutants (e.g., ultrafine particles) cross placenta.
- Maternal exposure associated with:
- Vulnerability:
- Children: Higher intake per body weight, developing organs.
- Elderly: Worsening of chronic diseases.
⭐ Impact of prenatal air pollution exposure (especially PM2.5, PAHs) on neurodevelopment (e.g., cognitive delays, ASD risk) and birth weight (e.g., LBW, IUGR) is a critical exam focus.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Silicosis: Silica dust; eggshell calcification (hilar nodes), ↑ TB risk.
- CWP: Coal dust; melanoptysis, Caplan syndrome (RA + pneumoconiosis).
- Asbestosis: Asbestos fibers; pleural plaques, ferruginous bodies, ↑ mesothelioma, bronchogenic Ca risk.
- Byssinosis: Cotton dust; "Monday fever", chest tightness (worse on work return).
- CO Poisoning: Cherry-red discoloration (postmortem); carboxyhemoglobin (Hb affinity 200-250x > O2).
- Lead Poisoning: Burton's line, basophilic stippling, wrist/foot drop.
- PM2.5/10: Exacerbates asthma, COPD, cardiovascular disease.
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