This is how
living in a polluted city affects diabetic women
Pollution increases the risk of heart disease in diabetic women says a
new study!
According to a new study, diabetic women, who are exposed
to air pollution, may have a much higher risk for heart disease, according to a long-term. Although studies have
shown that people with diabetesare particularly vulnerable to the cardiovascular
effects of acute exposures to air pollution, this study is one of the first to
demonstrate high risks of cardiovascular disease among individuals with
diabetes with long-term exposures to particulate matter, said lead author Jaime
E. Hart from Harvard Medical School in Boston, Massachusetts.
While all women had small increased risks of cardiovascular disease (CVD) with more air pollution
exposure, the risk of cardiovascular disease and stroke among women with
diabetes for each 10 micrograms per cubic meter of air was 44 percent for CVD
(66 percent for stroke) for smallest size pollution; 17 percent for CVD (18
percent for stroke) for road dust-type larger size pollution; and 19 percent
for CVD (23 percent for stroke) for exposure to both sizes of pollution.
Researchers also found higher effects of air pollution among women 70 and
older, obese women and women who lived in the northeast or south. ‘It is
important to identify these subgroups, so that pollution standards can be
developed that protect them,’ Hart said.
The study is published in the Journal of the
American Heart Association.
Source: www.thehealthsite.com
27.11.2015
Life is full
of "presents"
if YOU are in the present
Gordana Biernat
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