Sunday, June 8, 2025
spot_img

Cooking with wood can cause lung damage: Study

Date:

Share post:

spot_imgspot_img

People who cook with biomass fuels like wood are at risk of suffering considerable damage to their lungs from breathing in dangerous concentrations of pollutants and bacterial toxins, say researchers, including one of Indian-origin.
Pollutants from cooking with biomass are a major contributor to the estimated 4 million deaths a year from household air pollution-related illness.
“It is important to detect, understand and reverse the early alterations that develop in response to chronic exposures to biomass fuel emissions,” said study co-author Abhilash Kizhakke Puliyakote from the University of California San Diego in the US.
For the findings, the research team investigated the impact of cookstove pollutants in 23 people cooking with liquefied petroleum gas or wood biomass in Thanjavur, India.
The researchers measured the concentrations of pollutants in the homes and then studied the lung function of the individuals, using traditional tests such as spirometry.
They also used advanced CT scanning to make quantitative measurements — for instance, they acquired one scan when the person inhaled and another after they exhaled and measured the difference between the images to see how the lungs were functioning.
Analysis showed that the ones who cooked with wood biomass were exposed to greater concentrations of pollutants and bacterial endotoxins compared to liquefied petroleum gas users.
They also had a significantly higher level of air trapping in their lungs, a condition associated with lung diseases.
“Air trapping happens when a part of the lung is unable to efficiently exchange air with the environment, so the next time you breathe in, you’re not getting enough oxygen into that region and eliminating carbon dioxide,” said Dr Kizhakke Puliyakote.
“That part of the lung has impaired gas exchange,” Puliyakote added.
The researchers found a smaller subset of the biomass users who had very high levels of air trapping and abnormal tissue mechanics, even when compared to other biomass users.
In about one-third of the group, more than 50 per cent of the air they inhaled ended up trapped in their lungs. (IANS)

spot_imgspot_img

Related articles

Hopes of truce in PMK rise as political parties gear up for 2026 TN Assembly polls

Chennai, June 8 : While major political parties in Tamil Nadu have already launched their pre-election groundwork for...

Class 10 student electrocuted by illegal fence in Kerala’s Nilambur, protests erupt

Thiruvananthapuram, June 8 : Tension flared in Nilambur in Kerala's Malappuram district after a Class 10 student was...

TN to roll out multi-lingual audio guides at 22 key tourist sites

Chennai, June 8: In a move to modernise tourism and improve visitor engagement, the Tamil Nadu Tourism Development...

Visitors praise state’s genuine hospitality, safety

By Our Reporter SHILLONG, June 7: When national media hastily labelled Sohra as “crime-prone” following one unfortunate incident, it...