The Long Shadow of Wildfire Smoke: A National Stroke Risk for Seniors
A large-scale national study of over 25 million older U.S. adults has found that long-term exposure to fine particulate matter (PM2.5) specifically from wildfire smoke is associated with an increased risk of stroke. Using a high-resolution machine learning model to distinguish smoke-related pollution from other sources, researchers observed a dose-response relationship, where longer exposure windows correlated with higher risk. For each 1 µg/m³ increase in the three-year average of wildfire smoke PM2.5, stroke risk rose by 1.3%, an association that was generally stronger than for non-smoke PM2.5.
Why it might matter to you:
This research directly links an environmental exposure to a major acute cardiovascular event, reinforcing the role of public health in clinical outcomes. For clinicians, it underscores the importance of considering environmental history, particularly for vulnerable older patients in regions prone to wildfires, as part of a holistic risk assessment for stroke prevention.
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