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Reuters Home Air Filters May Improve Elders' Heart Health

Date: 18-Feb-08
Country: US
Author: Anne Harding

While the couples were all non-smokers, the improvement seen in the study was "in the same ballpark" as would be seen after a person quits smoking, Dr. Steffen Loft of the Institute of Public Health in Copenhagen, the study's lead author, told Reuters Health.

There is a wealth of data on how breathing minute particles carried in the air, known as particulate matter, can worsen heart and lung disease and even increase mortality rates, Loft and his team note in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine.

To better understand how particulate matter in indoor air affects health, the researchers used a battery of tests to assess microvascular function and inflammation in 21 couples 60 to 75 years old after breathing nonfiltered air, and then after breathing filtered air for 48 hours.

Microvascular function looks at how well the tiny blood vessels linking the veins and arteries are able to relax and dilate in response to blood and oxygen demands, Loft explained. Impairment of microvascular function is a sign of coronary heart disease, and can also promote atherosclerosis, he added.

On average, microvascular function improved by 8.1 percent for the study participants after they had spent two days breathing filtered air. "It may ... be speculated that further improvement may occur after prolonged intervention by 6 months to 1 year, and that this could result in further reduction in cardiovascular risk in this healthy, elderly age group," the research team concludes.

Indoor air pollution typically comes from heating sources, candles, cooking, nearby traffic and even a neighbour's cigarette smoke, for some apartment dwellers, Loft said. The key finding of the current study, according to the researcher, is that "the level of particles in a regular, normal home actually affects the vascular function in elderly people."

"Air pollution, both indoor and out, is certainly affecting people's hearts," he added.

Loft and his colleagues now plan to investigate how particulate matter from wood stoves used to heat homes in Scandinavia and parts of the United States can affect health.

SOURCE: American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, February 15, 2008.

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15Feb08 16:31 GMT
Source RTRS Reuters News
Categories: IDS/TEXT INTEREST/AFA INTEREST/CSA INTEREST/GNS INTEREST/LBY INTEREST/REULB INTEREST/RWS INTEREST/RWSA INTEREST/SXNA PKG/RTRWD PKG/RTRWD/HEALTH MST/L/EN TGT/RON

REUTERS

US Vows To Pay For Any Damage Caused By Satellite

[HPNPCHB]

By Stephanie Nebehay

GENEVA - The United States pledged on Friday to compensate countries if debris lands on their territory from a dying US spy satellite that the Pentagon plans to shoot down.

US Ambassador Christina Rocca said that if efforts fail to strike the satellite with a missile while it is still in space, it was expected to make an "uncontrolled re-entry into the earth's atmosphere on or about March 6".

The satellite is carrying more than 1,000 pounds (454 kg) of hydrazine fuel, and could release much of it as a toxic gas, according to Deputy US National Security Adviser James Jeffrey.

"Whether the engagement succeeds or fails, the US is prepared to offer assistance to governments to mitigate the consequences of any satellite debris impacts on their territory," Rocca told the Conference on Disarmament.

This was in keeping with a 1972 treaty on international liability for damage caused by space objects, which the United States has ratified, she said.

US officials said on Thursday that President George W. Bush had decided to have the Navy shoot

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