DID YOU KNOW?
- Male brains are more strongly affected by pollution than female brains
- Pollution exposure could cause memory and learning problems in people
- It causes 'rampant' inflammation throughout the brain
Early exposure to air pollution causes harmful
changes in the brain seen in autism and schizophrenia, research has shown.
The findings in mice follow previous research
linking traffic pollution and higher rates of autism in children.
As in humans, it was mostly male mice that were
affected.
Besides suffering physical damage to their brains,
they performed poorly in tests of short-term memory, learning ability and
impulses.
Exposure to air pollution causes harmful changes in
the brain seen in autism and schizophrenia
In a series of experiments, scientists exposed mice
to levels of air pollution typically found in medium-sized cities during the
first two weeks after birth.
Mice examined 24 hours after their last exposure
displayed evidence of ‘rampant’ inflammation throughout their brains.
Fluid-filled ventricle chambers on both sides of the
brain were also enlarged to two or three times their normal size.
Lead researcher Professor Deborah Cory-Slechta, from
the University of Rochester, U.S., said: ‘When we looked closely at the
ventricles, we could see that the white matter that normally surrounds them
hadn’t fully developed.
‘It appears that inflammation had damaged those
brain cells and prevented that region of the brain from developing, and the ventricles
simply expanded to fill the space.
‘Our findings add to the growing body of evidence
that air pollution may play a role in autism, as well as in other
neurodevelopmental disorders.’
Pollution has a more significant effect on the
brains of boys than of girls - autism is also more common in boys.
The same defects were seen in other groups of mice
40 and 270 days after exposure, suggesting they were permanent.
Brains of all three groups of mice also had raised
levels of the nerve message chemical glutamate.
Again, this is seen in humans with autism and
schizophrenia.
The research, published in the journal Environmental
Health Perspectives, focused on ultra-fine carbon particles of the type
produced by factories and motor vehicles.
Being so small, the particles can travel deep into
the lungs and become absorbed into the bloodstream.
Last year, a study published in the journal JAMA
Psychiatry showed that children who spend the first year of life in areas
highly polluted by traffic are three times more likely to develop autism.
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