Airborne Particulate Matter and Human Health: Toxicological Assessment and Importance of Size and Composition of Particles for Oxidative Damage and Carcinogenic Mechanisms
National and Kapodistrian University of Athens · Athens State University
Abstract
Air pollution has been considered a hazard to human health. In the past decades, many studies highlighted the role of ambient airborne particulate matter (PM) as an important environmental pollutant for many different cardiopulmonary diseases and lung cancer. Numerous epidemiological studies in the past 30 years found a strong exposure-response relationship between PM for short-term effects (premature mortality, hospital admissions) and long-term or cumulative health effects (morbidity, lung cancer, cardiovascular and cardiopulmonary diseases, etc). Current research on airborne particle-induced health effects investigates the critical characteristics of particulate matter that determine their biological…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 22.11
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 142
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Particulates
- Oxidative stress
- Environmental chemistry
- Ultrafine particle
- Carcinogen
- Air pollution
- Toxicology
- Chemistry
- Good health and well-being