Dusty workplace may cause change of heart.The heart doesn't pound with fear or race with excitement because a person wants it to. These things happen involuntarily, triggered by commands from the autonomic nervous system autonomic nervous system: see nervous system. autonomic nervous system Part of the nervous system that is not under conscious control and that regulates the internal organs. It includes the sympathetic, parasympathetic, and enteric nervous systems. . A new study reports that breathing high concentrations of fine dust elicits subtle changes in autonomic control of heart rhythms. The finding suggests why certain dust-generating jobs may increase a worker's risk of cardiovascular disease Cardiovascular disease Disease that affects the heart and blood vessels. Mentioned in: Lipoproteins Test cardiovascular disease , including heart attacks. David C. Christiani and his colleagues at the Harvard School of Public Health The Harvard School of Public Health is (colloquially, HSPH) is one of the professional graduate schools of Harvard University. Located in Longwood Area of the Boston, Massachusetts neighborhood of Mission Hill, next to Harvard Medical School and Cambridge, Massachusetts, in Boston recruited 40 healthy men to wear devices that continuously recorded their heartbeats on several days. All were boilermakers--some apprentice welders and others seasoned journeyman--assigned to the repair of massive electric-utility boilers. At work, each encountered welding fumes fumes odorous gases and other volatile materials; inhalation of irritating fumes causes coughing and, if sufficiently severe, irreversible pulmonary edema. or soot containing high concentrations of particles 2.5 micrometers in diameter or smaller. Such so-called PM-2.5 pollutants can be inhaled deeply into lungs. Heart-rate measurements continued when the men were off work, even on weekends. This enabled the researchers to evaluate the men's heart responses to a range of stresses, exertions, and concentrations of particulates. When exposed to workday PM-2.5 concentrations, which were often more than quadruple those in Boston's outdoor air, the men's heart-rate variability fell; diminished heart-rate variability is a risk factor for heart attacks. Everyone's heart rate fluctuates from moment to moment in response to stress, breathing rate, and other factors, yet people differ in the range that this rate varies. One individual's heart rate may fluctuate between 59 and 61 beats per minute beats per minute Cardiac pacing The unit of measure for the frequency of heart depolarizations or contractions each minute–or pulse rate (bpm), while another's may swing between 50 and 70 bpm. The boilermakers tended to experience their lowest variability at about 1 p.m. on work days, even though PM-2.5 pollution might have peaked earlier, according to a report in the Aug. 28 CIRCULATION. The low variability persisted until the end of the men's 12-hour shifts, usually 5 or 6 hours later, Christiani says. Overall, he told SCIENCE NEWS, the team saw a significant decrease in heart-rate variability as PM-2.5 pollution increased. Though the occupational exposure was much higher than the public would encounter in most urban areas of the United States, Christiani notes, "some Asian cities are easily that [polluted]." These findings dovetail dovetail (dov´tāl), n a widened or fanned-out portion of a prepared cavity, usually established deliberately to increase the retention and resistance form. with data recorded in an elderly population. Last year, researchers at Harvard and at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center Both an international and regional referral center, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) in Boston, Massachusetts is a major teaching hospital of Harvard Medical School. It was formed out of the 1996 merger of Beth Israel Hospital (founded in 1916) and , also in Boston, reported finding "short-term autonomic imbalance autonomic imbalance n. A lack of balance between the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems, especially when manifested by vasomotor disturbances. Also called vasomotor imbalance. , reflected by changes in heart rate and heart-rate variability." Short-term tests in 21 people showed lower heart-rate variability on days when outdoor PM-2.5 pollution was highest. What distinguishes the new study, besides the higher dust concentrations, is that the researchers recorded heart patterns for longer periods on each test day and then averaged data over different stretches of time. In doing so, the latest study uncovered evidence of two different effects of dust. One emerges almost immediately after breathing heavy dust. Its characteristics suggest that particulate intake affects a person's autonomic nervous system, Christiani says. The second effect shows up only after several hours of breathing workplace dust and hints of heart-rate changes due to inflammation. "We have long known that air pollution is bad, not just for the lungs," notes Antonio Sastre of the Midwest Research Institute Midwest Research Institute (MRI) is an independent, not-for-profit, contract research organization based in Kansas City, Missouri. MRI was established in Kansas City in 1944 to provide research and development for industry. in Kansas City, Mo. "But how to link effects directly to the cardiovascular system cardiovascular system: see circulatory system. cardiovascular system System of vessels that convey blood to and from tissues throughout the body, bringing nutrients and oxygen and removing wastes and carbon dioxide. has been a little mysterious." If confirmed, the new study's hint at a linkage between heart-rate variability and dust-induced inflammation could indicate that "you receive small but constant damage whenever you're exposed," Sastre says. "Prior to this study, you wouldn't have had a reason to look for that." |
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