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A Critical Review on the Effect of Particulate Matter (PM) in Air on Public Health
Author(s) -
Debraj Mukhopadhyay,
J. Swaminathan,
Arun Kumar Sharma,
Soham Basu,
Parth Patel,
Dattatreya Mukherjee,
Mbbs Student
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
public health review : international journal of public health research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2349-4166
pISSN - 2349-4158
DOI - 10.17511/ijphr.2021.i02.02
Subject(s) - particulates , incidence (geometry) , air pollution , coagulation , environmental chemistry , environmental science , medicine , environmental health , chemistry , biology , ecology , physics , optics
According to the World Health Organization (WHO), particulate matter (PM) contamination causesaround 800,000 premature deaths per year, ranking 13th in the world in terms of mortality.However, several findings revealed that the correlation is much stronger and more complicated thanpreviously believed. PM is an element of emissions comprised of very small, acidic, organiccompounds, metals, and particulate soil or dust particles or fluid droplets. The most consistent airquality component linked to human illness is PM, which is categorized by size. PM is likely to developcardiovascular and cerebrovascular disorders due to the mechanisms of inflammation, overt andindirect coagulation activation, and direct translocation to the systemic circulation. The evidence onthe cardiovascular system that shows a PM effect is strong. Coronary incidence and mortality ratesin populations prone to long-term PM toxicity were significantly higher. Short-term acute emissionsincrease coronary incidence rates subtly within days of the pollution peak.

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