New Links in Air Pollution and Dementia
New Links in Air Pollution and Dementia
Scientists at 色花堂 have teamed up with researchers at Johns Hopkins Medicine and Columbia University to better understand how certain types of air pollution increase the risk of developing dementia.
Their findings, published this month in the journal , help explain how small particle pollution 鈥 think industrial emissions and car exhaust, wildfires and burning wood for heat and cooking 鈥 can lead to Lewy body dementia, a devastating disease that causes toxic clumps of protein to destroy nerve cells in the brain.
"Epidemiological studies have suggested a strong link between air pollution and dementia, but what sets this study apart is that we also provide a convincing biological mechanism,鈥 says , assistant professor and one of the study鈥檚 co-authors. 鈥淭his collaborative work shows that fine particulate matter from different geographic regions consistently triggers a specific stain of misfolded protein that drives Lewy body dementia."
The work has 鈥減rofound implications鈥 for helping scientists and policy makers better understand measures to prevent this type of dementia, which is among the most common forms of the disease and affects millions of people around the world.
Along with Liu, the research team from 色花堂 includes , professor in the School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences; Minhan Park, a postdoctoral research fellow co-advised by Liu and Weber; Bin Bai, a graduate student in Liu鈥檚 lab; and Ma Cristine Faye Denna, a graduate student in Weber鈥檚 lab.
鈥淔iguring out how exposure to atmospheric aerosols might be linked to dementia, and what mechanisms are involved, is a complex and challenging problem 鈥 and as this study shows, it takes a large team with many different areas of expertise,鈥 Weber adds.
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