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19
May
2026
|
10:49
Europe/London

Short exposures to common air pollutants shown to have distinct impacts on lung function and brain activity

New research by a collaboration of UKbased scientists has revealed that common indoor and outdoor air pollutants can alter both brain and respiratory function within just four hours of exposure, offering key insights into how air pollution impacts brain health and may contribute to dementia risk.

Air pollution can influence the brain either directly, when harmful particles enter the brain, or indirectly, through inflammation in the lungs which then impacts the brain. Neurological diseases have been increasing for decades and there is now a greater appreciation that long term exposure to elevated levels of air pollution are associated in dementia risk. While we often categorise air quality by the total amount of particulate matter, this new study demonstrates that the source of the pollution matters as much as the quantity.

The findings in reveal that different pollutant sources produce varied health effects even at identical concentrations in the air. Recognising these differences is essential for shaping public policy, improving clinical diagnosis and developing protective strategies. With an ever鈥慻rowing ageing population and increasing urbanisation, the public鈥慼ealth imperative to mitigate neurological disease becomes increasingly urgent.

Lead author Thomas Faherty of the University of Birmingham said: 鈥淭his unique clinical study highlighted the importance of the lung鈥揵rain axis in brain responses to air pollution. Safely exposing the same individuals to multiple realworld pollution mixtures allowed us to detect differences between pollutants, demonstrating the value of this approach for further pollution-dementia research.鈥

In a doubleblind study involving 15 healthy volunteers, participants were exposed to clean air, limonene SOA (a citrus fragrance commonly used in cleaning products), diesel exhaust, woodsmoke and cooking emissions. After 60 minutes of exposure, and a four-hour break, researchers assessed respiratory function alongside working memory, selective attention, socioemotional processing, psychomotor speed and motor control.

Respiratory responses showed limonene had the greatest impact on lung function, followed by woodsmoke, diesel exhaust and finally cooking emissions.

Cognitive function was also found to be significantly influenced by pollutant source. Diesel exhaust and woodsmoke improved processing speed; limonenederived secondary organic aerosol enhanced working memory compared to cooking emissions; and diesel exhaust showed signs of impairing executive function. The team suggests that the presence of nitrogen oxides (NOX), known vasodilators, may alter blood flow to the brain and contribute to these mixed cognitive effects.

鈥淓ven though the pollution mixtures were adjusted to contain similar levels of particulate matter, which is how we currently measure air pollution, we didn鈥檛 see a single, uniform response. Instead, each pollution source produced its own pattern of short鈥憈erm changes in the lungs and the brain. This tells us that the body doesn鈥檛 respond to all air pollution in the same way, the source and composition of the pollution really matter.鈥
 
 

Consortium lead, Gordon McFiggans, Professor of Atmospheric Sciences, The University of Manchester

Given that measurable effects were detectable after a brief 60-minute exposure, the findings suggest that prolonged exposure could have significant longterm consequences for brain health. As rates of neurological disease increase, the study informs an immediate need for pollutant sourcespecific public health guidance, improved clinical awareness and more targeted strategies to protect vulnerable populations.

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Paper details:

Full title: Neurological and respiratory outcomes of the HIPTox controlled double-blind air pollution exposure trial

Journal: Nature Partner Journals Clean Air

DOI: 10.1038/s44407-026-00068-3

URL: 

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