| The Positive
Health Benefits of Negative Ions
by Jim English
Air pollution is a serious, though often unrecognized
health problem. Epidemiological studies consistently point to a
direct link between urban air pollution—especially particulate
pollution created by combustion powered vehicles and power generation
plants—and cardiovascular and pulmonary diseases.(1) Long-term
exposure to particulate pollution—tiny particles smaller than
10 microns (a human hair is 70 microns wide)—is known to increase
illness and death rates from lung cancer, chronic obstructive pulmonary
disease and emphysema. Additionally, exposure to other airborne
pollutants, including sulfur dioxide (SO2), nitrogen dioxide (NO2)
and ozone (O3), is associated with development of asthma, bronchitis,
and respiratory infections.(2)
European researchers investigated the risks of
long-term exposure to traffic pollution in a study examining 5000
volunteers selected from the ongoing Netherlands Cohort study on
Diet and Cancer (NLCS). They discovered that people living near
major roads (and therefore exposed to higher levels of traffic-related
air pollution) were more likely to die from cardiopulmonary disease
or lung cancer than their rural peers, leading the authors to conclude
that 'long-term exposure to traffic-related air pollution may shorten
life expectancy.(3)
In addition to causing lung damage, air pollution is now also recognized
as a threat to cardiovascular health. Reporting in the March 6,
2002 Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA),
researchers examined long-term health data on 500,000 individuals
to compare increases in air pollution levels with incidence of death.
They discovered that when air pollution levels suddenly increased,
in addition to expected increases in deaths from asthma, pneumonia,
and emphysema, there was an unexpected increase in the number of
deaths related to heart attacks and stroke. Most surprising was
the finding that when air pollution levels rose, so did deaths from
all causes, not just those related to the heart and lungs (Fig.
1).(4)
One possible explanation for the increase in cardiovascular-related
deaths is that air pollution causes oxidative stress that, in turn,
triggers an inflammatory response in the lungs that leads to the
release of chemicals that impair heart function and blood pressure.
This was shown to be the case when scientists
working in the Netherlands exposed rats to high levels of particulate
air pollution. Following exposure, the researchers found that plasma
levels of fibrinogen were elevated by 20 percent, which could presumably
increase blood viscosity, leading to decreased tissue blood flow.
They also measured a 400 percent jump in tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha,
and a 350 percent increase in nitric oxide synthase (NOS) in lung
fluids. The researchers speculated that as particulates lodge in
lung tissues they induce an increase in the production of nitric
oxide (NO). Under normal conditions nitric oxide is an important
neurotransmitter that aids numerous signaling pathways involved
in motor learning, protein modification, arterial dilation and immune
defense. But when conditions trigger the overproduction of NO as
seen in the Netherlands study, the result is serious damage to the
endothelial cells lining the blood vessels of the lungs.(5)
When Japanese researchers exposed guinea pigs
to particulates from diesel exhaust, the lungs showed a significant
elevation of leukotrienes and eosinophils, two important biomarkers
of inflammation and cytotoxicity commonly observed in cases of chronic
obstructive lung disease (COLD). The researchers noted that these
findings indicate that chronic exposure to diesel exhaust induces
continuous inflammation and overproduction of mucus and phospholipids
in the lung.(6)
Another mechanism implicated in air pollution-related
heart failures involves bone marrow and atherosclerotic plaques.
Researchers in Vancouver, British Columbia found that exposure to
high levels of air pollution stimulates bone marrow to release leukocytes
and platelets that accumulate preferentially in pulmonary capillaries.
In addition to causing damage to lung tissues, the researchers also
observed that inhalation of particulate pollution causes changes
in atherosclerotic plaque lesions that make the deposits more vulnerable
to rupture.
They postulated that exposure to particulate air
pollution induces a systemic inflammatory response that includes
the release of inflammatory mediators that stimulate bone marrow
to release leukocytes and platelets, leading to lung inflammation
and changes of atherosclerotic plaque, making them more vulnerable
to rupture.(7)
Diabetics are particularly susceptible to cardiovascular damage
caused by airborne pollution. A recent study published in the journal
Epidemiology examined Medicare records and hospital admissions in
US cities: Chicago, Detroit, Pittsburgh, and Seattle. Looking at
records from 1988 to 1994 they found that diabetics were twice as
likely as non-diabetics to be admitted to a hospital with a cardiovascular
problem caused by airborne particulate pollution. They also found
that persons 75 years of age and older also faced a higher risk
of cardiovascular injury.(8)
Children are particularly at risk for health issues related to air
pollution. Chronic exposure to particulates, sulfur dioxide and
nitrogen dioxide have been associated with up to 300 percent increases
in nonspecific chronic respiratory symptoms. Exposure to automotive
pollution, particularly from truck and diesel exhaust, has been
shown to cause significant increases in respiratory symptoms and
decreased lung function.(9)
To examine the relationship between traffic-related
air pollution and childhood development of asthma and other childhood
respiratory diseases and infections, researchers in the Netherlands
looked at data from some 4,000 babies born in the Netherlands. The
health of the children was linked to measurements of traffic-generated
air pollution (nitrogen dioxide, particulate matter less than 2.5
microns in diameter, and soot) in the homes of each subject. Their
study found that, by the age of two years, children exposed to higher
levels of air pollutants were more likely to suffer from wheezing,
physician-diagnosed asthma, ear/nose/throat infections, and flu/serious
colds.(10)
Part of the problem for children is that studies
show that—relative to their size—children inhale more
deeply and trap more airborne particles and pollutants in their
lungs than either adolescents or adults.(11) Children also have
higher metabolic rates than adults, breathe more than adults, and
spend more time outdoors than adults, exacerbating their susceptibility
to pollution-related health problems.
When Polish researchers examined the effects of air pollution in
Krakow they discovered that children living in those areas with
the highest levels of air pollution suffered from stunted growth.
After collecting data on 958 children and assessing body growth
rates by height changes they found that body growth rates for children
from the most highly polluted area was lower by 1.5 cm over a 2-year
period than those from the control area. The compromising effect
of air pollution on height gains was about the same for both short
and tall children.(12)
New research shows that the health threat posed by air pollution
may actually affect children even before they are born. On December
9, 2002, Canadian researchers published a study revealing that animals
exposed to polluted air close to a steel mill suffered genetic damage
and produced fewer offspring. Most alarming was the discovery that
damaged DNA was being passed on to offspring by their fathers. While
virtually all mutations were inherited from the father mice, the
researchers said this doesn't mean that females are not susceptible.
What it does suggest is that steel workers, who are mostly male,
may be at extra risk of similar damage.
Christopher Somers, James Quinn, and colleagues
published an earlier study that found that gulls living near a steel
mill on Lake Ontario suffered from genetic mutations. In a current
study the researchers raised two groups of mice— the first
a half-mile downwind of a steel mill on Lake Ontario, and the second
about 20 miles away. The mice breathing the polluted air had twice
as many mutations in their DNA as the mice breathing fresh country
air.(13)
The findings suggest that steel mill workers
and people living near those mills should be checked for damage
to their health, said the researchers, at McMaster University in
Hamilton, Ontario. "Our findings suggest that there is an urgent
need to investigate the genetic consequences associated with exposure
to chemical pollution through the inhalation of urban and industrial
air."
Ironically, the study was originally aimed at
showing how efforts to clean up pollution around the steel mill
had improved the environment. 'This had been one of the most polluted
places, if not the most polluted place in Canada,' stated Christopher
Somers, one of the lead researchers. 'There has been a concerted
effort to clean up Hamilton harbor and reduce air emissions.' The
experiment had been aimed at showing these had helped. ''We haven't
really seen that,'' he said.
While government, business and environmental interests wrangle over
a morass of economic, legislative and technological solutions for
cleaning up polluted air, the vital issue facing individuals is
how best to protect their health. Currently over 75 million people
in the US live in counties where the air concentrations of particulate
matter smaller than 2.5 microns (PM2.5) exceed safe levels (Fig.
2.).(14)
While living away from polluted urban centers
is an obvious choice, this option is not always possible. Nor is
it always effective. Air currents and weather patterns can move
polluted air out of urban manufacturing centers and into rural areas
where pollution can concentrate to a dangerous degree. Additionally,
modern farming produces more food with fewer workers, using improved
productivity methods that increasingly rely on the use of agricultural
pesticides and chemicals, and irrigation pumps and tractors powered
by diesel engines.(15)
Staying indoors does not guarantee better air
quality, either. Several recent studies have indicated that much
of the significant health risk associated with exposure to fine
particles actually occurred indoors.(16) And many individuals at
increased risk of health complications following exposure to high
particle concentrations, such as the elderly and those suffering
from cardiovascular and pulmonary diseases, may spend more than
90% of their time indoors, raising new concerns about the relationship
between outdoor particle concentrations and those found in indoor
microenvironments.(17)
As the scope of air pollution related health problems grows, so
too does the number of people turning to air purifying solutions
for protection. Home air filtration products offer a number of options,
including electrostatic, UV radiation, water and advanced HEPA filtration
technologies. Until recently, these products—many engineered
for entire houses and buildings—were bulky and expensive to
install and maintain, placing them out of reach for most people.
Recently, a number of consumer products have become available utilizing
ion-generating technology to eliminate airborne pollutants, allergens
and viruses from immediate breathing spaces.
These devices work by generating a flow of negative
ions that charge and bind together airborne particulate matter,
which then clumps and precipitates out of the air. Ion generating
devices have been shown to be effective against dust, cigarette
smoke, pet dander, pollen, mold spores, viruses, and bacteria. In
addition to eliminating harmful particulates from the air, negative
ions also have a number of unique health benefits.
Early clues about the biological effect of ions on human health
appear as reports of increased irritability, migraine attacks and
thromboembolism in response to alterations in atmospheric electrical
states that accompany incoming weather fronts.(18)
Scientific evidence began to mount in the 1970s
when researchers measured metabolic changes in mice and rats in
response to changes in ion charge (negative or positive) and concentration,
including alterations in serotonin levels and recovery from illness.
When exposed to positive ions (which accumulate in the atmosphere
at the beginning of a storm) researchers routinely noted that animals
became agitated, aggressive and were more prone to respiratory illness.
Furthermore, when mice were infected with influenza virus and housed
in an environment depleted of all ions, death rates increased, indicating
a previously unknown benefit on overall health.(19)
Later, researchers measured the impact of atmospheric
electricity on human subjects by monitoring daily changes in urine
excretion of neurohormones in samples gathered from 1,000 volunteers
exposed to positive ions generated 1 to 2 days prior to the arrival
of a storm front. By measuring the changing levels of neurohormones
in the 24-hour urinary output of the subjects during normal and
weather-stress days, the researchers compiled a profile of changes
in levels of serotonin, 5-HIAA (5-hydroxyindole acetic acid, a serotonin
metabolite), adrenaline, noradrenaline, histamine and thyroxine.
The researchers found that the electrical charges
(positive ionization) engendered by every incoming weather front
produce a release of serotonin.(20) They further identified three
classes of weather sensitivity reactions:
- serotonin hyperproduction causing a typical
irritation syndrome;
- adrenal deficiency producing a typical exhaustion
syndrome;
- hyperthyroidism with subclinical 'apathetic'
thyroid symptoms.
Noting that these conditions occur during annual
wind storms (Sirocco, Sharav and Santa Ana winds), the authors stated
that the effects, "which are mainly due to positive ionization
of the air," could be "prevented by negative ionizing
apparatuses or specific drug treatment."(21)
Further evidence of the influence of ions appeared
when scientists exposed mice to an atmosphere enriched with either
positive or negative ions. While negative ions had no negative effect
on the mice, positive ions caused elevations in norepinephrine levels
within one day. When exposure to positive ions was continued for
longer periods, ranging from 3 to 10 days, norepinephrine levels
dropped. The author noted that the results showed that "positive
ions cause stress after short time application in excess. After
longer exposure, a state of exhaustion can be observed in the form
of a lowered norepinephrine level."(22)
Just as positive ions build up in the atmosphere prior to a storm
front, negative ions accumulate following a storm. This surfeit
of negative ions has long been associated with improvements in mood
and physical health. Research conducted in the last decade has begun
to support the view that negative ions have a net positive effect
on health.
One of the most tantalizing hints regarding negative
ions and health surfaced when German researchers discovered a link
between catecholamine regulation and lifespan after depriving experimental
animals of negative ions. First, researchers at the Goldstein and
Lewin Dept. of Medical Research in Stahnsdorf, Germany isolated
mice and rats in air-tight, sealed acrylic cases. Next, they filtered
the ambient air to remove all negative ions from the sealed cases.
Their research led to the discovery that a prolonged deficiency
of negative ions led to an accelerated rate of death for the experimental
animals. Examination of the animals led researchers to conclude
that the results 'strongly suggest that animal death is related
to disturbances in neurohormonal regulation and pituitary insufficiency.(23)
Researchers at the Russian Academy of Sciences
in Moscow discovered that negative ions are able to help protect
the body from induced physical stress. When the researchers immobilized
rats and exposed them to negatively charged air ions they discovered
that the ions prevented the development of pathological changes
characteristic of acute stress that are observed in untreated rats.
The protective action of negative air ions was observed in all the
experimental animals independently of their types of behavior.(24)
British researchers at the Centre for Sport and
Exercise Sciences in Liverpool exposed male subjects to negative
ions and measured physiological responses, including body temperature,
heart rate and respiration, while at rest and during exercise. Negative
ions were found to significantly improve all physiological states,
particularly during rest. Most important was the finding that negative
ions are "biologically active and that they do affect the body's
circadian rhythmicity."(25)
Another clue to the role of negative ions in health
comes from Russian research conducted at the Institute of Theoretical
and Experimental Biophysics of the Russian Academy of Sciences,
in Pushchino, Russia. Researchers found that exposure to negative
ions increased levels of the protective antioxidant enzyme superoxide
dismutase (SOD) in mammalian erythrocytes. The researchers also
discovered minute amounts of H2O2 (hydrogen peroxide), writing,
"The primary physiochemical mechanism of beneficial biological
action of negative air ions is suggested to be related to the stimulation
of superoxide dismutase activity by micromolar concentrations of
H2O2 (hydrogen peroxide)."(26)
While progress has been made in some areas of air pollution, such
as reductions in emissions of lead, sulfur dioxide (SO2), nitrogen
dioxide (NO2) and ozone (O3), air pollution, particularly from particulates,
remains a serious health problem. In addition to damaging the lungs
and heart, air pollution is now recognized as being especially harmful
to children, the elderly, and select sensitive populations, such
as those afflicted with diabetes, cardiopulmonary diseases and other
debilitating illnesses.
To address air pollution-related health problems
a growing number of people are using personal and home air filtration
products that generate negative ions to charge and precipitate airborne
particulate matter for removal to create localized zones of improved
air quality.
Consumer devices that utilize negative ion-generating
technology have been shown to eliminate airborne pollutants, dust,
cigarette smoke, pet dander, pollen, mold spores, viruses, and bacteria
from the air. Negative ions have long been attributed to improvements
in mood and physical health. Research supports the view that negative
ions have a net positive effect on health, including improved mood,
stabilized catecholamine regulation and circadian rhythm, enhanced
recovery from physical exertion and protection from positive ion-related
stress and exhaustion disorders.
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