Air passengers exposed to extremely high levels of ultrafine particle pollution, study finds

Levels during boarding and taxiing were far above those defined as high by the World Health Organization

The Guardian

#UltrafineParticles https://www.cbc.ca/newsinteractives/features/ultrafine-particles “scientists are learning more about a category of #pollutants that are smaller in stature yet potentially more dangerous.

They're called ultrafine particles.

A thousand times thinner than a strand of hair, ultrafine particles (#UFPs) are emitted by vehicles and industrial activity — and according to a recent study led by researchers at McGill University in Montreal, contribute to more than 1,000 premature deaths a year in that city and Toronto.”

Tiny and unregulated, ultrafine particles have the potential to cause major health problems

A thousand times thinner than a strand of hair, ultrafine particles are emitted by vehicles and industrial activity — and according to a recent study led by researchers at McGill University, contribute to more than 1,000 premature deaths a year in Montreal and Toronto.

Ultrafine particles according to a recent study contribute to more than 1,000 premature deaths a year in that Montreal and Toronto #pollution #ultrafineparticles #health #Canada
https://www.cbc.ca/newsinteractives/features/ultrafine-particles
Tiny and unregulated, ultrafine particles have the potential to cause major health problems

A thousand times thinner than a strand of hair, ultrafine particles are emitted by vehicles and industrial activity — and according to a recent study led by researchers at McGill University, contribute to more than 1,000 premature deaths a year in Montreal and Toronto.

The study found that UFPs heighten the risk of respiratory and cardiovascular diseases and can lead to tissue damage, DNA modification, and disruption of cell growth #Ultrafineparticles #prematuredeaths #respiratorydiseases #airpollution #health https://www.nationalobserver.com/2024/08/07/news/researchers-tie-1100-deaths-ultrafine-particles
Researchers tie 1,100 deaths to ultrafine particles

A new study from McGill University shows UFPs — primarily from vehicle emissions and industrial activities — are linked to approximately 1,100 premature deaths each year in Toronto and Montreal. About 600 of those fatalities occur in Toronto alone.

Canada's National Observer
This graph shows an UFP measurement in my garden when my neighbors burn their woodstove. Levels go up to 140K particles/cm3. Such high levels are also measured nearby a very crowded highway. Nobody wants to live there!
#Awareness
#ultrafineparticles
#airpollution

date: 2023-03-08 11:14:13
by: GCARE@AirPollSurrey

We have extended the deadline for this exciting PhD position to work #GCARE @AirPollSurrey & @NPL for a home/UK candidate!

APPLY NOW: https://www.surrey.ac.uk/fees-and-funding/studentships/lung-deposited-surface-area-deposition-airborne-nanoparticles-different-environments

#research #phd #airquality #aerosols #ultrafineparticles

🐦🔗: https://twitter.com/twitter/statuses/1633425886346190851
#PhdPosition

Lung-deposited surface area deposition of airborne nanoparticles in different environments | University of Surrey

Ultrafine particles can change defense against lung cancer

While it may seem common knowledge that smoking is bad for your lungs, if and how ultrafine particles present in cigarette smoke impact the development and progression of lung cancer remains unclear. Researchers at Baylor College of Medicine sought to find how airborne ultrafine particles in smoke can change a host's defense against lung cancer.

Medical Xpress