Health & Medicine
Air-Pollution Can Increase Child's Risk for Hyperactivity
Kathleen Lees
First Posted: May 21, 2013 11:55 AM EDT
Early-life exposure to highly traffic-related air pollution may be linked to higher instances of hyperactivity scores, starting at age 7.
According to new research from the University of Cincinnati (UC) and Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, the study brings about an increasing concern for children in heavily urban areas.
"There is increasing concern about the potential effects of traffic-related air pollution on the developing brain," Nicholas Newman said, the director of the Pediatric Environmental Health and Lead Clinic at Cincinnati Children's Hospital and the study's lead author. "This impact is not fully understood due to limited epidemiological studies."To our knowledge, this is the largest prospective cohort with the longest follow-up investigating early life exposure to traffic-related air pollution and neurobehavioral outcomes at school age."
Scientists believe that early life exposures to a variety of toxic substances can cause health issues that emerge later in life.
Researchers collected data on traffic-related air pollution (TRAP) from the Cincinnati Childhood Allergy and Air Pollution Study (CCAAPS), a long-term epidemiological study examining the effects of traffic particulates on childhood respiratory health and allergy development. Study participants -- newborns in the Cincinnati metropolitan area from 2001 through 2003 -- were chosen based on family history and their residence being either near or far from a major highway or bus route.
Children were followed from infancy to 7, when parents completed the Behavioral Assessment System for Children, 2nd Edition (BASC-2), assessing attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and related symptoms including attention problems, aggression, conduct problems and atypical behavior. Of the 762 children initially enrolled in the study, 576 were included in the final analysis at 7 years of age.
Results showed that children who were exposed to the highest third amount of TRAP during the first year of life were more likely to have hyperactivity scores in the "at risk" range when they were 7 years old. The "at risk" range for hyperactivity in children means that they need to be monitored carefully because they are at risk for developing clinically important symptoms.
"Several biological mechanisms could explain the association between hyperactive behaviors and traffic-related air pollution," Newman says, including narrowed blood vessels in the body and toxicity in the brain's frontal cortex.
According to Newman, the higher air pollution exposure, the higher increase in hyperactivity among children whose mothers had greater than a high school education. Mothers with higher education may expect higher achievement, he says, affecting the parental report of behavioral concerns.
"The observed association between traffic-related air pollution and hyperactivity may have far-reaching implications for public health," Newman says, noting that studies have shown that approximately 11 percent of the U.S. population lives within 100 meters of a four-lane highway and that 40 percent of children attend school within 400 meters of a major highway.
"Traffic-related air pollution is one of many factors associated with changes in neurodevelopment, but it is one that is potentially preventable."
The findings for the study can be found in this week's edition of Environmental Health Perspectives.
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First Posted: May 21, 2013 11:55 AM EDT
Early-life exposure to highly traffic-related air pollution may be linked to higher instances of hyperactivity scores, starting at age 7.
According to new research from the University of Cincinnati (UC) and Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, the study brings about an increasing concern for children in heavily urban areas.
"There is increasing concern about the potential effects of traffic-related air pollution on the developing brain," Nicholas Newman said, the director of the Pediatric Environmental Health and Lead Clinic at Cincinnati Children's Hospital and the study's lead author. "This impact is not fully understood due to limited epidemiological studies."To our knowledge, this is the largest prospective cohort with the longest follow-up investigating early life exposure to traffic-related air pollution and neurobehavioral outcomes at school age."
Scientists believe that early life exposures to a variety of toxic substances can cause health issues that emerge later in life.
Researchers collected data on traffic-related air pollution (TRAP) from the Cincinnati Childhood Allergy and Air Pollution Study (CCAAPS), a long-term epidemiological study examining the effects of traffic particulates on childhood respiratory health and allergy development. Study participants -- newborns in the Cincinnati metropolitan area from 2001 through 2003 -- were chosen based on family history and their residence being either near or far from a major highway or bus route.
Children were followed from infancy to 7, when parents completed the Behavioral Assessment System for Children, 2nd Edition (BASC-2), assessing attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and related symptoms including attention problems, aggression, conduct problems and atypical behavior. Of the 762 children initially enrolled in the study, 576 were included in the final analysis at 7 years of age.
Results showed that children who were exposed to the highest third amount of TRAP during the first year of life were more likely to have hyperactivity scores in the "at risk" range when they were 7 years old. The "at risk" range for hyperactivity in children means that they need to be monitored carefully because they are at risk for developing clinically important symptoms.
"Several biological mechanisms could explain the association between hyperactive behaviors and traffic-related air pollution," Newman says, including narrowed blood vessels in the body and toxicity in the brain's frontal cortex.
According to Newman, the higher air pollution exposure, the higher increase in hyperactivity among children whose mothers had greater than a high school education. Mothers with higher education may expect higher achievement, he says, affecting the parental report of behavioral concerns.
"The observed association between traffic-related air pollution and hyperactivity may have far-reaching implications for public health," Newman says, noting that studies have shown that approximately 11 percent of the U.S. population lives within 100 meters of a four-lane highway and that 40 percent of children attend school within 400 meters of a major highway.
"Traffic-related air pollution is one of many factors associated with changes in neurodevelopment, but it is one that is potentially preventable."
The findings for the study can be found in this week's edition of Environmental Health Perspectives.
See Now: NASA's Juno Spacecraft's Rendezvous With Jupiter's Mammoth Cyclone