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By Michelle Roberts Health reporter, BBC News
Breathing in heavy traffic fumes can trigger a heart attack, say UK experts.
Heart attack risk is raised for about six hours post-exposure and goes down
again after that, researchers found.
They say in the British Medical Journal that pollution probably hastens rather
than directly cause attacks.
But repeated exposure is still bad for health, they say, substantially
shortening life expectancy, and so the advice to people remains the same -
avoid as far as is possible.
Prof Jeremy Pearson, associate medical director at the British Heart
Foundation, which co-funded the study, said: "This large-scale study shows
conclusively that your risk of having a heart attack goes up temporarily, for
around six hours, after breathing in higher levels of vehicle exhaust.
Start Quote
Unhealthy diets and smoking et cetera are much bigger heart attack risk
factors, but car fumes are the cream on the cake that can tip you over
Prof Jeremy Pearson of the British Heart Foundation
"We know that pollution can have a major effect on your heart health, possibly
because it can 'thicken' the blood to make it more likely to clot, putting you
at higher risk of a heart attack.
"Our advice to patients remains the same - if you've been diagnosed with heart
disease, try to avoid spending long periods outside in areas where there are
likely to be high traffic pollution levels, such as on or near busy roads."
Early peak
The research looked at the medical records of almost 80,000 heart attack
patients in England and Wales, cross-referencing these details with air
pollution data.
This enabled the investigators to plot hourly levels of air pollution (PM10,
ozone, CO, NO2, and SO2) against onset of heart attack symptoms and see if
there was any link.
Higher levels of air pollution did appear to be linked with onset of a heart
attack lasting for six hours after exposure.
After this time frame, risk went back down again.
Krishnan Bhaskaran from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, who
led the research, said the findings suggested that pollution was not a major
contributing factor to heart attacks.
For example, being exposed to a spell of medium-level rather than low-level
pollution would raise heart attack risk by 5%, by his calculations.
"If anything, it looks like it brings heart attack forward by a few hours.
These are cardiac events that probably would have happened anyway."
But he said the findings should not detract from the fact that chronic exposure
to air pollution was hazardous to health.
Prof Pearson from the BHF agrees: "Unhealthy diets and smoking etc are much
bigger heart attack risk factors, but car fumes are the cream on the cake that
can tip you over."