by Sophie Mitchell
A recent study by Nature Communications has
concluded that ‘ambient black soot particles reach the fetal side of the
placenta’, indicating that pollution can now affect our unborn children and
future generations.
The placenta is made up of two distinctive
parts, the maternal placenta and the fetal placenta. Oxygen and nutrients cross
from the maternal placenta to the fetal placenta, while waste products such as
carbon dioxide pass the other way. It is through this mechanism that substances
like alcohol and nicotine can cross into an unborn child and why mothers are
encouraged to avoid them. The research suggests these soot particles reach the
placenta from the mother's lungs, with the transfer of these soot particles
‘representing a potential mechanism explaining the detrimental health effects
of pollution from early life onwards.’
Professor Jonathan Grigg of Queen Mary
University, London, said: “There's very strong epidemiological evidence that
maternal exposure to air-pollution particles is associated with adverse
outcomes such as miscarriage.” Yet, while this information may make pregnant
women run for the ‘clean air’ of the country-side, accepts do accept that
pregnant women cannot change the area they live in. Small changes such as
ventilating houses using windows facing away from busy roads or choosing routes
if walking or cycling with less traffic, can reduce the amount of exposure to
potentially harmful pollutants. Furthermore, experts have also claimed that this
needs “to be addressed at policy levels” and further research is needed into
the potentially harmful effects soot particulates may have on the unborn child.
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