Wood burning smoke was always something
that one needed to control one’s exposure to.
Yet the fumes are noxious enough to drive one away pretty quick, so it
was a problem we learned to live with.
In times past, all dwellings were smoky and lung problems became the
norm.
Again occasional usage bothers few
and only briefly. Mass usage would be a
much different matter, but not likely to happen at all.
In any event I grew up with this
stuff and much more nasty coal. You soon
learn that wind is your friend and stay clear of the gases. Thus I have no problem organizing a string of
biochar earthen kilns. The wind is
always present and it allows a person to work around these emitters.
Air Pollutants from Fireplaces and Wood-Burning Stoves Raise Health
Concerns
Released: 2/4/2011 10:25 AM EST
Embargo expired: 2/5/2011 6:00 PM EST
Source: American
Chemical Society (ACS)
*Note to journalists: Please credit the journal or the American
Chemical Society as publisher of this report.*
Newswise — With millions of people warding off winter’s chill with
blazing fireplaces and wood-burning stoves, scientists are raising red flags
about the potential health effects of the smoke released from burning wood.
Their study, published in the American Chemical Society’s (ACS’)
journal, Chemical Research in Toxicology, found that the invisible
particles inhaled into the lungs from wood smoke may have several adverse
health effects. It is among 39 peer-reviewed scientific journals published by
ACS, the world’s largest scientific society.
Steffen Loft, Ph.D., and colleagues cite the abundant scientific
evidence linking inhalation of fine particles of air pollution — so-called
“particulate matter” — from motor vehicle exhaust, coal-fired electric power
plants, and certain other sources with heart disease, asthma, bronchitis and
other health problems. However, relatively little information of that kind
exists about the effects of wood smoke particulate matter (WSPM), even though
millions of people around the world use wood for home heating and cooking and
routinely inhale WSPM.
The scientists analyzed and compared particulate matter in air from the
center of a village in Denmark
where most residents used wood stoves to a neighboring rural area with few wood
stoves, as well as to pure WSPM collected from a wood stove. Airborne particles
in the village and pure WSPM tended to be of the most potentially hazardous
size — small enough to be inhaled into the deepest parts of the lungs. WSPM
contained higher levels of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), which
include “probable” human carcinogens. When tested on cultures of human cells,
WSPM also caused more damage to the genetic material, DNA; more inflammation;
and had greater activity in turning on genes in ways linked to disease.
The authors acknowledged funding from the National
Research Councils, Denmark, and the Danish Environmental Protection Agency.
“Oxidative Stress, DNA Damage, and Inflammation Induced by Ambient Air and Wood Smoke Particulate Matter in Human A549 and THP-1 Cell Lines”
The American Chemical Society is a non-profit organization chartered by
the U.S.
Congress. With more than 163,000 members, ACS is the world’s largest scientific
society and a global leader in providing access to chemistry-related research
through its multiple databases, peer-reviewed journals and scientific
conferences. Its main offices are in Washington ,
D.C. , and Columbus , Ohio .
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