• Rev Mal Respir · Apr 2010

    Review

    [Atmospheric air pollution: a risk factor for COPD?].

    • Y-M Allain, N Roche, and G Huchon.
    • Service de pneumologie et réanimation, Hôtel-Dieu, université Paris Descartes, 1, place du Parvis de Notre-Dame, 75004 Paris, France.
    • Rev Mal Respir. 2010 Apr 1;27(4):349-63.

    AbstractTobacco smoking is the leading cause of COPD worldwide but other risk factors have been recognized. Air pollution is one of them, but its exact role in the development of COPD is hard to demonstrate. Its physiological effects on lung function have only been studied since the nineties by long and tedious cohort studies. Difficulties arise from the heterogeneity of air pollution (gas and particles); thus, its respiratory effects have to be examined for every component separately, and in different populations. It is also necessary to analyse the effects of atmospheric pollution in the short and the long term, considering both its physiological, clinical and toxicological effects, from childhood to adulthood. These factors make it difficult to obtain statistically significant results. Nevertheless, most studies seem to point to a role of air pollution in the development of COPD via oxydative stress but further studies are needed to confirm the exact effect of each component of air pollution on the respiratory tract. These studies could lead to improved public health policies and results are awaited that would identify at-risk populations, decide appropriate preventive measures and propose documented thresholds in pollution exposure... thereby limiting the spread of COPD.Copyright 2010 SPLF. Published by Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.

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