* Get your questions answered by tens of thousands of community members
* Network with expats and english speakers living in Shanghai
* Find like-minded people in a sometimes intimidating environment
* GET ONE MONTH FREE GUANXI SMS LOOKUP SERVICE
           close
Remember?
  Forum FAQForum FAQ   SearchSearch   PreferencesPreferences  Watched TopicsWatched Topics  Watched ForumsWatched Forums
Log in to check your private messages Log in to check your private messages    Log inLog in   Ignored Users

Post new topic   Reply to topic
View previous topic Printable version Log in to check your private messages View next topic
Author Message
yu888
Board Deity


Joined: Jan 25, 2003
Posts: 17252
Location: ZhongShanParkArea SH
Post  Posted: Oct 09, 2007 - 11:11 AM  Reply with quote  Back to top
Post subject: Pollution: Dangerous to Joggers

Gee, really? Wink

Quote:
Wednesday, Sep. 12, 2007
Pollution: Dangerous to Joggers
By Alice Park

Living in a bustling, vibrant city can certainly expose you to a lot of things, not the least of which is air pollution. Tiny particulates in the air have always been a risk for the lungs, setting off respiratory illness like asthma and emphysema, and researchers from Scotland now report that the heavily contaminated air in urban areas could also be hazardous to the heart.

Led by Dr. Nicholas Mills of the University of Edinburgh, the Scottish team found that during exercise, heart patients who inhaled as much diesel exhaust as is typically found in heavily trafficked cities (about 300 mcgs of particulate matter per cubic meter of air) increased the stress on their hearts by threefold, compared with control patients who exercised in cleaner air. In addition, patients who breathed the exhaust showed a drop in blood levels of the protein t-PA, or tissue plasminogen activator, which inhibits the formation of blood clots that can trigger heart attacks. "This suggests that patients exercising in a polluted area might be putting their heart under additional strain," says Mills, "We also found that even six hours after the one-hour exposure to air pollution, there are still adverse effects on the way blood vessels respond."

Previous studies have shown that breathing in particulates in pollution can trigger potent inflammatory reactions in the body, which can in turn lead to the destabilization of fatty plaques in heart arteries; if the plaques rupture, they can block blood flow and cause a heart attack. In addition, says Mills, because diesel exhaust particles are so small — in the nanometer range — they may be passing directly from the lungs into the blood and aggravating plaques and blood vessels. Mills chose to focus on diesel particles since diesel engines spew out as much as 100 times the pollutants as petroleum based car engines.

And he isn't the first to reveal the damaging effects of pollution on the heart. A recent U.S. study reported that exposure to polluted air boosts the risk of death from heart disease by 76%, while a trial in Germany found that heart attack rates in a group of people sitting in traffic — in a car or bus, or riding a bicycle — rose in the hour after they had been exposed to the exhaust fumes. A series of studies from countries around the world has also documented that heart attack rates are higher on days when air-pollution indices rise. "There is growing evidence that there is a relationship there," says Dr. Murray Mittleman of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston.

So, is jogging along a city street out of the question? Not quite. Most, but not all, studies have found a detrimental relationship between pollution and the heart. More importantly, a fear of city smog shouldn't keep you from working out. "People should exercise where and when they can," advises Mittleman. "If your only choice is exercising in a setting that is not perfectly protected from air quality, then you will probably get more benefit from exercise than risk. On the other hand, if you have a choice, it's probably better to exercise away from traffic when you can." You may not actually get anywhere on a treadmill, but at least you'll be keeping your heart safe from some extra stress.

* Find this article at:
* http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1661313,00.html

_________________
Thoughts & updates about Shanghai On my Blog for more details:Random Thoughts about Living in Shanghai...and more
View user's profile Visit poster's website AIM Address ICQ Number
8lrr8
StreetBeater
StreetBeater


Joined: Oct 14, 2004
Posts: 2201
Location: here!
Post  Posted: Oct 09, 2007 - 01:36 PM  Reply with quote  Back to top

so running while breathing in nasty air is still better than chilling on your couch doing jack squat. why am i not surprised...
View user's profile
Display posts from previous:     
Jump to:  
All times are GMT + 8 Hours
Post new topic   Reply to topic
View previous topic Printable version Log in to check your private messages View next topic
Powered by MDForum 2.0.7© 2003-2007 MAXdev Team
Credits
Welcome Guest

Username
Password
Remember me
Register Here!
Join the Shanghai Expat News in the Mail
Email:

Latest Newsletters
Events in Shanghai
August 19, 2008

Members - July 29, 2008
Discounts - August 21, 2008


Web ShanghaiExpat

Welcome Guest
Join Us!

Register, it's free!
 Create an account
Members: Online
Members: Members:28
Guests: Guests:1021
Total: Total:1049

    Home    Sitemap    Terms of Service    Privacy Policy     Contact Us    Advertising 

All logos and trademarks on this site are property of their respective owner. The comments and forum posts are property of their posters, all the rest copyright 1999-2007 by Max Intermedia LTD.

Powered by MD-Pro