Introduction
With the great concern surrounding the destruction of the
earth's atmosphere due to air pollution, the immediate and direct harm caused to
the human body is often over shadowed. While many are aware that our careless
use of hazardous chemicals and fossil fuels may leave the planet uninhabitable
in the future, most over look the fact that they are also cause real damage to
our bodies at this moment. Such pollutants cause damage to our respiratory
system, leading to the fluctuation of the life span of an individual depending
on a number of conditions. Amongst these conditions are the individuals specific
geographic location, age, and life style. This paper is structured as a series
of relevant questions and answers to report on the description of these
pollutants there affects on our bodies.
What are the pollutants? And how
do they affect our bodies?
In order to understand how air pollution affects
our body, you must under stand exactly what this pollution is. The pollutants
that harm our respiratory system are known as particulates. Particulates are the
small solid particles that you can see through a ray of sunlight. They are
products of incomplete combustion in engines (example: automobile engines), road
dust, and wood smoke. Billions of tons of coal and oil are consumed around the
world every year.
When these fuels burn they produce smoke and other
by-products into the atmosphere. Although wind and rain occasionally wash away
the smoke given off by power plants and automobiles, much still remains.
Particulate matter (soot, ash, and other solids), usually consist of unburned
hydrocarbons, carbon monoxide, sulfur dioxide, various nitrogen oxides, ozone,
and lead. These compounds undergo a series of chemical reactions in the presence
of sunlight, the result is smog (a term used to describe a noxious mixture of
fog and smoke)
The process by which these pollutants harm our bodies
begins by simply taking a breath. Particulates are present every where, in some
areas they are as dense as 100,000 per milliliter of air. The damage begins when
the particulates are inhaled into the small air sacs of our lungs called
alveoli. With densities such as 100,000 per milliliter a single alveolus may
receive 1,500 particulates per day.
These particulates cause the
inflammation of the alveoli. The inflammation causes the body to produce agents
in the blood that in crease clotting ability, which leads to the decreased
functionality of the cardiovascular system, resulting in diseases and increased
mortality. In the blood, carbon monoxide interferes with the supply of oxygen to
all tissues and organs, including the brain and heart. Particulates accumulate
on the mucous linings of the airways and lungs and impair their functioning.
Continued exposure to particulates damages the lungs and increases an
individual's chances of developing such conditions as chronic bronchitis and
emphysema.
While you may see pollutants such as particulates, other
harmful ones are not visible. Amongst the most dangerous to our health are
Carbon Monoxide, Nitrogen Oxides, Sulfur dioxide, and Ozone. If you have ever
been in an enclosed parking garage or a tunnel and felt dizzy or light-headed
then you have felt the effect of carbon monoxide(CO). This odorless, colorless,
but poisonous gas is produced by the incomplete burning of fossil fuels, like
gasoline or diesel fuel.
Carbon Monoxide comes from cars, trucks, gas
furnaces and stoves, and some industrial processes. CO is also a toxin in
cigarettes. Carbon Monoxide combines with hemoglobin in the red blood cells, so
body cells and tissues cannot get the oxygen they need. Carbon Monoxide attacks
the immune system, especially affecting anyone with heart disease, anemia, and
emphysema and other lung diseases. Even when at low concentrations CO affects
mental function, vision, and alertness. Nitrogen Oxide is another pollutant that
has been nicknamed a jet-age pollutant because it is only apparent in highly
advanced countries. Sources of this are fuel plant, cars, and trucks. At lower
concentrations nitrogen oxides are a light brown gas. In high concentrations
they are major sources of haze and smog. They also combine with other compounds
to help form ozone. Nitrogen Oxides cause eye and lung irritation, and lowers
the resistance to respiratory illness, such as chest colds, bronchitis, and
influenza.
For children and people with asthma, this gas is can cause
death. Nitrogen Oxides maybe the most dangerous of these pollutants because it
also makes nitric acid, when combine with water in rain, snow, fog, or mist.
This then becomes the harmful acid rain.
Sulfur Dioxide is a heavy,
smelly, colorless gas which comes from industrial plants, petroleum refineries,
paper mills, and chemical plants. When combined with water it becomes sulfuric
acid. Sulfuric acid dissolves marble, turns plants yellow, and eats away at iron
and steel, you can imagine the possible damage to human tissue. It's effect on
people with asthma, heart disease, and emphysema is devastating. It is also a
major contribute to acid rain.
How serious of a thereat is it to our
health?
There are numerous cases displaying the grave danger of particulate
air pollution. One popular example occurred in London, England in the year 1952.
In this case excessive deaths were caused as a result of respiratory and
cardiovascular problems in that year. The research at that time revealed an
association between particulate and sulphur dioxide concentrations in the air
and risk of respiratory disease and death. The excessive problems are thought to
have been caused by "winter smogs". Winter smogs were frequent problem during
the 1940s through the 1950s when coal was the main fuel for both domestic and
commercial use.
Winter smogs are caused by temperature inversions which
trap particulates close to the ground. The air and smoke trapped contained high
concentrations of soot, sulphur dioxide, and other pollutants. This winter smog
took the lives of over 3,500 people. A similar incident in the United States
came about as a result of the same type of temperature changes and smog. In 1948
six thousand people became drastically ill and twenty died as a direct result of
winter smog in Pennsylvania. More recently an even greater tragedy occurred. One
of the great human and environmental disasters of the 1980s occurred on December
3, 1984, in Bhopal, India. About 50 tons of methyl isocyanate escaped into the
air from a pesticide company owned by the American corporation Union Carbide.
Estimates of the death toll in surrounding neighborhoods were as high as 2,500.
About 100,000 others were injured by the gas leak.
Who is at the
greatest risk?
Since the in industrial revolution city dwellers have always
been exposed to higher levels of particulate air pollution. As I have mentioned,
the fuels use in the urban factories release large amounts of pollutants such as
sulfur dioxide and soot. Another main factor is the heavy use if motor vehicles
by the city population.
In the city, where many people and objects
occupy a small area the problem is amplified. Depending on the weather
conditions the threat can become even greater. Another major factor is the
individual. While sex does not matter age and health history do. It has been
proven that death or illness from air pollution is more likely in young people,
old people, and people that smoke.
Children are often more vulnerable to
those pollutants for two main reasons. The first being that because of their
small size their heartbeats and metabolic rates are faster. Therefore all
reactions within their bodies including the harmful ones of pollutants (chiefly
the replacement of oxygen with carbon monoxide in the blood stream) take place
at an accelerated pace. The second is the relatively weak immune systems of
young children. Particulates that act as irritants take a greater toll on their
still developing bodies. The same threats that air pollution pose to young
people effect older members of society. Although their metabolic rates not high,
their immune systems maybe equally as weak. An investigation conducted by the
Helen Dwight Reid Educational Foundation on the joint effects of air pollution
and smoking showed that smokers in Beijing, China suffered from greater problems
in their pulmonary artery functions. They also had a vital lung capacity
decrease of over 10%.
Conclusion
It is apparent that our careless
use of fossil fuels and chemicals is destroying this planet. And it is now more
than ever apparent that at the same time we are destroying our bodies, proving
that our pollution is not just a problem that we can pass on to our children.