People with high cholesterol are especially vulnerable to heart
disease when they are exposed to diesel exhaust and other
ultra-fine particles that are common pollutants in urban air, media
reported Friday.
"Their combination creates a dangerous synergy that wreaks
cardiovascular havoc far beyond what's caused by the diesel or
cholesterol alone," said Dr. André Nel, chief of nanomedicine at
the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA in U.S. and a
researcher at UCLA's California NanoSystems Institute. He led a
team of 10 scientists who conducted the study.
Although diet, smoking and other factors contribute to the risk
of cardiovascular disease — the leading cause of death in the
Western world — scientists have long believed that air pollution,
particularly tiny pieces of soot from trucks and factories, plays a
major role, too.
For years, scientists around the world have reported that on
days when fine-particle pollution increases, deaths from lung
diseases, heart attacks and strokes rise substantially.
The scientists say their study, conducted on human cells as well
as on mice, is the first to explain how particulates in the air
activate genes that can cause heart attacks or strokes.
"Our results emphasize the importance of controlling air
pollution as another tool for preventing cardiovascular disease,"
said Ke Wei Gong, a UCLA cardiology researcher.
(Xinhua News Agency via Agencies July 28, 2007)