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German research on 397 10-year-olds found that living close to a major road increased resistance by 7% per 500m.
Air pollutants are known to be oxidisers that can impact on lipids and proteins in the blood.
But some experts say the results should be treated with caution.
The children in the study were invited for blood sampling at the age of 10, and glucose and insulin measurements were taken.
Their level of exposure to traffic pollution was estimated
using air pollution figures from 2008-09 for their birth address
neighbourhood.
The results were adjusted to take into account birth weight, body mass index (BMI) and exposure to second-hand smoke at home.
The study concluded that levels of insulin resistance were
greater in children with higher exposure to air pollution, such as
nitrogen dioxide and fine particulate matter.
It also found a larger effect in children with higher BMIs.
Oxidisers
Elisabeth Thiering and Joachim Heinrich, who led the research
at the German Research Centre for Environmental Health in Neuherberg,
said the link between traffic pollution and insulin resistance could be
explained.
"Although toxicity differs between air pollutants, they are
all considered potent oxidisers that act either directly on lipids and
proteins, or indirectly through the activation of intracellular oxidant
pathways," said Dr Heinrich.
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Prof Frank Kelly King's College LondonBreathing the same pollutant concentrations, children may have a two to fourfold higher dose reaching the lung”
"Oxidative stress caused by exposure to air pollutants may therefore play a role in the development of insulin resistance."
But Prof Jon Ayres, an expert in environmental and
respiratory medicine, of the University of Birmingham, said the results
were not clear-cut.
"As the authors point out, their measurements of fasting
blood insulin levels and estimations of air pollution levels were not
taken at the same time.
"Therefore, these results should be regarded with caution,
and a larger and methodologically more secure study needs to be done to
confirm the possible link between air pollution from traffic emissions
and insulin resistance in children."
'Higher dose'
Previous studies have shown links between air pollution and
other chronic conditions, such as atherosclerosis and heart disease.
Yet to date, epidemiological studies that have examined
associations between long-term exposure to traffic-related air pollution
and type 2 diabetes in adults are inconsistent, and studies on the
effect of air pollution on insulin resistance in children are scarce.
Frank Kelly, professor of environmental health at King's College London, said children were particularly vulnerable.
"They have a larger lung-to-body volume ratio, their airway
epithelium is more permeable to air pollutants, and the lung defence
mechanisms against particulate matter pollution and gaseous pollution
are not fully evolved."
"Breathing the same pollutant concentrations, children may
have a two to fourfold higher dose reaching the lung compared with
adults.
"It is of interest that this new study demonstrates that both
particulate-matter nitrogen dioxide are linked to increased risk of
insulin resistance in children. This finding is especially relevant for
cities in the UK such as London, which regularly exceeds current EU
limit values for nitrogen dioxide."
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