<p>A new analysis of more than 3,000 counties in the US suggests that people with long-term exposure to PM 2.5 may be more likely to die from Covid-19, leading to increased concern about the trajectory of the disease and its fatality rate in parts of north India battling alarmingly high levels of air pollution.</p>.<p>Though worried as cases in the Indian capital and its suburbs spike, pulmonologists here said a causal link between fine particle pollutants (PM2.5) and Covid-19 mortality has not yet been established.</p>.<p>The US study, published in the journal <em>Science Advances</em> on Thursday, assessed the impact of long-term exposure to air pollution on Covid-19 death rates in 3,089 counties in the US.</p>.<p>The researchers, including Xiao Wu from Harvard University, found that chronic exposure to PM2.5 pollutants -- tiny particles in the air that are two-and-a-half microns or less in width -- is linked to greater county-level Covid-19 mortality rates.</p>.<p>Dispelling some of the panic, experts here said the biological reasons for high rates of Covid-19 infection and deaths in places with high PM2.5 levels are yet to be understood.</p>.<p><strong>Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/delhis-air-quality-very-poor-may-improve-slightly-911981.html" target="_blank">Delhi's air quality 'very poor', may improve slightly</a></strong></p>.<p>"It is not proven currently that PM2.5 levels directly increase chances of infection or death," Piyush Goel, a pulmonologist from Gurgaon's Columbia Asia Hospital told PTI.</p>.<p>Goel explained that PM2.5 particulate matter consists of water vapour, dust particles, and pollutants, which may attach the Covid-19 virus and facilitate its airborne transmission.</p>.<p>"But this is only a school of thought and not confirmed," he cautioned.</p>.<p>"There have been no studies published in India right now which proves this scenario, but this is possible," he added.</p>.<p>According to the pulmonologist, the health of patients who maintained "somewhat stable" chronic lung conditions can become unstable due to the changing season and rising pollution levels.</p>.<p>"And if these patients get lung infection, it will be a more serious complication. The criticality will be high," Goel said.</p>.<p>He said exposure to high levels of pollution can lead to chronic lung disease and also hamper lung development in infants and toddlers.</p>.<p>"There are several studies backed by the World Health Organization which show that this may impact brain development also, and it could lead to lung cancer as well," Goel said.</p>.<p>"From children to full-grown adults, air pollution affects everyone in India, but how Covid-19 impacts people exposed to these conditions individually is too soon to tell," he added.</p>.<p>Delhi's air quality index (AQI) was 397 at 10 am on Thursday, when it also saw 6,715 reported Covid-19 cases, taking the infection tally to over 4.16 lakh. </p>.<p>The 24-hour average AQI in the national capital was 450, categorised as "severe" -- the highest since November 15 last year when it was 458 -- raising concerns on how this may impact the Covid-19 caseload. </p>.<p><strong>Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/north-and-central/stubble-burning-delhi-govt-forms-impact-assessment-panel-to-ascertain-effect-of-pusa-bio-decomposer-912071.html" target="_blank">Stubble burning: Delhi govt forms impact assessment panel to ascertain effect of Pusa bio-decomposer</a></strong></p>.<p>The National Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) had warned last week that Delhi may report nearly 15,000 Covid-19 cases daily in winter because of the prevalence of respiratory illnesses during this season that worsen the symptoms of the disease. </p>.<p>Commenting on the association between air pollution exposure and death from Covid-19, Anurag Agrawal, director of New Delhi’s CSIR-Institute of Genomics & Integrative Biology (IGIB), said both factors can affect the functioning of the lungs and heart, and lead to death.</p>.<p>"But whether the health risk from these is additive or greater remains to be seen," the IGIB pulmonologist told PTI.</p>.<p>The Harvard researchers noted that chronic exposure to PM 2.5 might cause overproduction of ACE-2 receptor proteins in the lungs, which the novel coronavirus uses to enter host cells.</p>.<p>They believe prolonged exposure to air pollution might also impair people's immune system, compromising their abilities to fight off the novel coronavirus infection. </p>.<p>"Chronic exposure to PM2.5 causes alveolar ACE-2 receptor overexpression and impairs host defences. This could cause a more severe form of Covid-19 in ACE-2-depleted lungs, increasing the likelihood of poor outcomes, including death," the Harvard scientists wrote in the study. </p>.<p>But they acknowledged that this is only a hypotheisis. </p>.<p>Citing the limitations of their study, the researchers said they were unable to account for individual-level risk factors such as age, race, and smoking status as such data was unavailable. </p>.<p>"This approach leaves us unable to make conclusions regarding individual-level associations," the scientists said </p>.<p>The Harvard scientists believe further research on how pollution and other factors may exacerbate Covid-19 symptoms and increase mortality risk is essential to guide policies and behaviour related to the pandemic.</p>.<p>Agrawal added that pollution levels must be controlled even without considering its association with Covid-19.</p>.<p>"Irrespective of the mathematics, we must strive to bring air pollution down to improve health," he said.</p>
<p>A new analysis of more than 3,000 counties in the US suggests that people with long-term exposure to PM 2.5 may be more likely to die from Covid-19, leading to increased concern about the trajectory of the disease and its fatality rate in parts of north India battling alarmingly high levels of air pollution.</p>.<p>Though worried as cases in the Indian capital and its suburbs spike, pulmonologists here said a causal link between fine particle pollutants (PM2.5) and Covid-19 mortality has not yet been established.</p>.<p>The US study, published in the journal <em>Science Advances</em> on Thursday, assessed the impact of long-term exposure to air pollution on Covid-19 death rates in 3,089 counties in the US.</p>.<p>The researchers, including Xiao Wu from Harvard University, found that chronic exposure to PM2.5 pollutants -- tiny particles in the air that are two-and-a-half microns or less in width -- is linked to greater county-level Covid-19 mortality rates.</p>.<p>Dispelling some of the panic, experts here said the biological reasons for high rates of Covid-19 infection and deaths in places with high PM2.5 levels are yet to be understood.</p>.<p><strong>Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/delhis-air-quality-very-poor-may-improve-slightly-911981.html" target="_blank">Delhi's air quality 'very poor', may improve slightly</a></strong></p>.<p>"It is not proven currently that PM2.5 levels directly increase chances of infection or death," Piyush Goel, a pulmonologist from Gurgaon's Columbia Asia Hospital told PTI.</p>.<p>Goel explained that PM2.5 particulate matter consists of water vapour, dust particles, and pollutants, which may attach the Covid-19 virus and facilitate its airborne transmission.</p>.<p>"But this is only a school of thought and not confirmed," he cautioned.</p>.<p>"There have been no studies published in India right now which proves this scenario, but this is possible," he added.</p>.<p>According to the pulmonologist, the health of patients who maintained "somewhat stable" chronic lung conditions can become unstable due to the changing season and rising pollution levels.</p>.<p>"And if these patients get lung infection, it will be a more serious complication. The criticality will be high," Goel said.</p>.<p>He said exposure to high levels of pollution can lead to chronic lung disease and also hamper lung development in infants and toddlers.</p>.<p>"There are several studies backed by the World Health Organization which show that this may impact brain development also, and it could lead to lung cancer as well," Goel said.</p>.<p>"From children to full-grown adults, air pollution affects everyone in India, but how Covid-19 impacts people exposed to these conditions individually is too soon to tell," he added.</p>.<p>Delhi's air quality index (AQI) was 397 at 10 am on Thursday, when it also saw 6,715 reported Covid-19 cases, taking the infection tally to over 4.16 lakh. </p>.<p>The 24-hour average AQI in the national capital was 450, categorised as "severe" -- the highest since November 15 last year when it was 458 -- raising concerns on how this may impact the Covid-19 caseload. </p>.<p><strong>Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/north-and-central/stubble-burning-delhi-govt-forms-impact-assessment-panel-to-ascertain-effect-of-pusa-bio-decomposer-912071.html" target="_blank">Stubble burning: Delhi govt forms impact assessment panel to ascertain effect of Pusa bio-decomposer</a></strong></p>.<p>The National Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) had warned last week that Delhi may report nearly 15,000 Covid-19 cases daily in winter because of the prevalence of respiratory illnesses during this season that worsen the symptoms of the disease. </p>.<p>Commenting on the association between air pollution exposure and death from Covid-19, Anurag Agrawal, director of New Delhi’s CSIR-Institute of Genomics & Integrative Biology (IGIB), said both factors can affect the functioning of the lungs and heart, and lead to death.</p>.<p>"But whether the health risk from these is additive or greater remains to be seen," the IGIB pulmonologist told PTI.</p>.<p>The Harvard researchers noted that chronic exposure to PM 2.5 might cause overproduction of ACE-2 receptor proteins in the lungs, which the novel coronavirus uses to enter host cells.</p>.<p>They believe prolonged exposure to air pollution might also impair people's immune system, compromising their abilities to fight off the novel coronavirus infection. </p>.<p>"Chronic exposure to PM2.5 causes alveolar ACE-2 receptor overexpression and impairs host defences. This could cause a more severe form of Covid-19 in ACE-2-depleted lungs, increasing the likelihood of poor outcomes, including death," the Harvard scientists wrote in the study. </p>.<p>But they acknowledged that this is only a hypotheisis. </p>.<p>Citing the limitations of their study, the researchers said they were unable to account for individual-level risk factors such as age, race, and smoking status as such data was unavailable. </p>.<p>"This approach leaves us unable to make conclusions regarding individual-level associations," the scientists said </p>.<p>The Harvard scientists believe further research on how pollution and other factors may exacerbate Covid-19 symptoms and increase mortality risk is essential to guide policies and behaviour related to the pandemic.</p>.<p>Agrawal added that pollution levels must be controlled even without considering its association with Covid-19.</p>.<p>"Irrespective of the mathematics, we must strive to bring air pollution down to improve health," he said.</p>