Air Pollution From Wildfires Linked to Higher Death Rates in Patients With Kidney Failure

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New research suggests that individuals with kidney failure may face a higher risk of dying prematurely if they're exposed to air pollution from wildfires. 

New research suggests that individuals with kidney failure may face a higher risk of dying prematurely if they're exposed to air pollution from wildfires. The findings appear in an upcoming issue of JASN.

Wildfires generate high levels of tiny particles of air pollution--called fine particulate matter--that can have a range of effects on health. When inhaled, fine particulate matter can travel into the respiratory tract and bloodstream and trigger oxidative stress and inflammation. Because of their frailty, patients with kidney failure might be especially susceptible to this environmental stressor, but little is known about the effects of air pollution exposures in these individuals.

To investigate, a team led by Ana Rappold, PhD (the US Environmental Protection Agency), along with Yuzhi Xi, MSPH and Abhijit V. Kshirsagar, MD, MPH (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), analyzed information from 253 US counties near a major wildfire between 2008 and 2012.

"This study was possible because the US Renal Disease System, a registry of patients with kidney failure, included vital records on almost all US patients receiving in-center hemodialysis, as well as the counties of the dialysis clinics. Secondly, we utilized an air quality model to estimate daily exposure to wildfire fine particulate matter across the country at the counties of the dialysis units," explained Ms. Xi.

Read more at American Society of Nephrology

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