Air pollution limits at Beijing Olympics eased heart burden
CBC News
Posted: May 15, 2012 4:01 PM ET
Last Updated: May 15, 2012 5:41 PM ET
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao's press conference is telecast live on a mall screen on March 18, 2008, a day of severe air pollution in Beijing before the city hosted the Summer Olympics.
Related
External Links
(Note:CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external links.)
The Beijing Olympics were a powerful laboratory for showing how improvements in air pollution improve cardiovascular health.
The Chinese capital is plagued by chronic air pollution. When the city was awarded the 2008 Summer Games, it promised to improve air quality for the event, shutting down factories and limiting vehicle traffic for the Olympics and Paralympics.
Junfeng Zhang, a professor of environmental and global health at the Keck School of Medicine at the University Southern California and his team of scientists from the U.S. and Beijing took advantage of the natural experiment that the pollution controls offered.
Normally, this type of experiment could only be done in a chamber at a laboratory with animals.
"This is an entire city," Zhang said in an interview from Los Angeles. "You have a city of three million people. This is the laboratory."
In a study in Tuesday's online issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association, the researchers examined biomarkers of cardiovascular health, such as blood pressure and heart rate, before, during and after the games for 125 residents who worked at a hospital in the host city.
A host of air pollutants were measured at the hospital and factors like temperature and relative humidity were considered. Personal exposures to pollutants, however, were not measured.
"During the Beijing Olympics, changes in air pollution were associated with acute changes in biomarkers of systematic inflammation and thrombosis as well as measures of cardiovascular physiology in healthy young persons," the study's authors concluded.
Pollution and cardiovascular disease risk
Other studies have said that national or regional air pollution reductions have been associated with reductions in cardiorespiratory mortality rates, the prevalence of bronchitis and childhood hospital admissions for respiratory disease. But little was known about the mechanism of how air pollutants are tied to heart and lung issues.
The researchers saw how biomarker changes were linked with air pollution and disease pathways in healthy doctors with an average age of 24. They said the measured changes may be important because the chronic effects of high blood pressure and cholesterol problems begin in youth and increase cardiovascular disease risk at older ages.
In the study, participants went to a clinic twice before the air pollution controls were introduced, twice during the event and twice after the games ended to give blood samples and to take blood pressure and electrocardiogram measurements.
Dr. Paul Oh, a scientist and medical director of Toronto Rehabilitation Institute's cardiac rehabilitation and secondary prevention program, said air pollution is stressful to the body in three ways:
- When air pollutants physically stress the body, heart rate and blood pressure go up.
- The blood's platelets get caught in blood vessels.
- Inflammation in response to pollution can lead to heart attacks and strokes.
Oh called it an interesting study into the potential mechanisms that capitalized on a "great research opportunity."
While the researchers focused on measuring rapid changes in healthy people, he sees broader implications.
"If there's an older person with compromised heart or lung function, these short-term spikes can actually have real deleterious effect on health in the short term."
The U.S. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, which funded the research, said the findings show how there's immediate health benefits when air pollution levels are lowered.
The Health Effects Institute, Beijing Environment Protection Bureau and Beijing Council of Science and Technology also provided funding.
With files from CBC's Ron CharlesShare Tools
Top News Headlines
- Senior Pakistani politician shot dead
- Gunmen in Pakistan have killed a senior member of Imran Khan's Movement for Justice (PTI) party outside her home in Karachi. more »
- Rescue attempt over for New Brunswick fishermen
- The rescue attempt for two missing fishermen has been called off in New Brunswick, hours after one body was found. more »
- Car drives into crowd at Virginia parade
- About 50 to 60 people were injured after a driver described by witnesses as an elderly man drove his car into a group of hikers marching in a parade in a small Virginia mountain town. more »
- Spectator killed at Edmonton Jeep event
- A 20-year-old woman died Saturday during an event for Jeep enthusiasts held in a parking lot just west of downtown Edmonton. more »
Must Watch
Latest Technology & Science News Headlines
- High Arctic research station saved by new funding
- Canada's northernmost research lab won't have to shut down after all and will be able to resume year-round operations, with the help of a new grant from the federal government. more »
- 2 earthquakes felt in Ontario and Quebec
- Two earthquakes near the Ontario-Quebec border could be felt across both provinces this morning. more »
- Chris Hadfield's translator: Q&A with Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen
- While Chris Hadfield was returning from the International Space Station on Monday night, another Canadian astronaut was offering his own unique play-by-play of the action as the Soyuz capsule plunged to Earth. more »
- Why some Canadians want to die on Mars
- More than 80,000 people have applied for a Dutch non-profit organization's proposed one-way trip to Mars. Anna Maria Tremonti, host of The Current, spoke to four Canadians — two Mars one applicants, a member of the Mars One team, and astronaut Julie Payette — about whether it's a good idea. more »
Bob McDonald's Blog
Chris Hadfield: The gravity of gravity May. 17, 2013 9:58 AM After five months of being Superman and a media superstar, Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield is now beginning the challenging task of adapting his mortal body and brain to life back on Earth.
Quirks & Quarks
- May 18: Apps for Apes May. 17, 2013 4:26 PM Scientists at more than 2 dozen zoos around the world, including the Toronto Zoo, have been using computer tablets to stimulate our bright orange primate cousins, the orangutans. And the orangutans have been loving it.
Latest Features
- Spectator killed at Edmonton Jeep event
- Car drives into crowd at Virginia parade
- Toronto Mayor Rob Ford cancels weekly radio show
- Rescue attempt over for New Brunswick fishermen
- Winning ticket sold in Florida for $590M Powerball jackpot
- Email is proof Senate greenlit expenses, Brazeau says
- Astronaut Chris Hadfield adjusts to 'earthling' life
- Senior Pakistani politician shot dead
- 1 person hurt after trains collide near Medicine Hat

