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Medical Forum / Diseases and Disorders / Asthma / August 2004

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Cleaning chemicals linked to asthma in young children

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Roman Bystrianyk - 26 Aug 2004 02:45 GMT
http://www.healthsentinel.com/news.php?event=news_print_list_item&id=160

Sarah Boseley, "Cleaning chemicals linked to asthma in young
children", Guardian, August 26, 2004,
Link: http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,3604,1290880,00.html

Fumes given off by cleaning products and solvents in the home may be a
cause of asthma in young children, according to new research.

Australian researchers measured the levels of chemicals, called
volatile organic compounds (VOCs), in the homes of children under
three with asthma. These VOCs are given off by commonly used cleaning
products, polishes and air fresheners as well as paints, floor
adhesives, fitted carpets and cigarette smoke.

Their study, published today in the journal Thorax, says that although
the number of children in the study was relatively small - 88 toddlers
with asthma and 104 without - it showed a marked increase in asthma
risk among those children with higher levels of VOCs in their homes.
Yet the levels measured were below the levels generally recommended as
acceptable indoors.

Krassi Rumche, of the school of public health at Curtin University of
Technology in Perth, Australia, and colleagues, who conducted the
study, say some of these VOCs are carcinogenic as well as having a
possible association with asthma.

"There is insufficient evidence concerning the health implications of
VOCs at concentrations commonly found inside houses," they write.
"Research in this area is complicated by the wide range of relevant
VOCs and the continual appearance of new products which release
different combinations of these compounds."

They studied children aged six months to three years who had been
admitted with asthma symptoms to the accident and emergency department
of the Princess Margaret hospital in Perth and compared them with a
second group of children without asthma recruited from very similar
backgrounds.

Two weeks after the emergency hospital visit in the winter and again
in the summer, the researchers took measurements in the children's
homes to establish the levels of VOCs. The parents also completed
questionnaires on the children's health and the children were
subjected to a test for allergies.

More children were allergic (77%) among those with asthma than among
those without (50%), as would be expected, but the significant finding
was that levels of indoor pollutants were higher in the homes of
children with asthma. The highest risk was for the chemical benzene,
followed by ethylbenzene and toluene. For every 10 unit increase in
toluene and benzene, the risk of asthma increased by almost two times
and three times, respectively.

A second study in the journal from a different group of Australian
researchers suggests that children exposed to fumes from indoor
heaters in the first year of life could be 47% more likely than others
to develop wheezing and hyperactive airways (rapid narrowing) which
are features of asthma.

Gas appliances, in particular, emit higher levels of nitrogen dioxide
than would be found outdoors, say the authors, Guy Marks from the
Woolcock Institute of Medical Research at the University of Sydney and
colleagues. Some epidemiological studies have linked nitrogen dioxide
with an increased risk of respiratory symptoms and illnesses.

The authors of the study say that if their findings are backed by
further researches, the type of heaters used in homes with babies
should be reviewed.
jackmallory@webtv.net - 29 Aug 2004 16:18 GMT
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