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Study argues traffic noise is a novel risk factor for cardiovascular diseases

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An international group of noise experts from the Copenhagen Cancer Institute (Denmark), the Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute (Swiss TPH), the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Philadelphia (U.S.) and the Department of Cardiology at the Mainz University Medical Center have analyzed recent epidemiological data and found strong evidence that transportation noise is closely linked to cardiovascular and cerebrovascular disease.

As a result, the researchers call for traffic noise to be recognized as a risk factor for cardiovascular disease. The results of their analyses appear in Circulation Research.

Epidemiological studies have shown that traffic noise—such as road, rail, or aircraft noise—increases the risk of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, with high-quality evidence for the development of cardiometabolic diseases such as , heart failure, stroke, and diabetes. According to the WHO, more than 1.6 million healthy years of life are lost every year in Western Europe due to traffic-related noise.

Night-time traffic noise, in particular, leads to frequent interruptions and shortening of sleep, an increase in stress hormone levels and increased in the vascular system and brain—and thus to the increased formation of free radicals. These factors can promote vascular disorders, inflammation, and , thereby increasing the risk of cardiovascular disease. In the current review, the international team of authors from Denmark, the U.S., Switzerland, and Germany focused on transportation noise's indirect, non-auditory cardiovascular health effects.

The authors provide an updated overview of the epidemiologic research on the effects of transportation noise on cardiovascular and disease, discuss the mechanistic findings from the latest clinical and experimental studies, and propose new risk markers to address noise-induced cardiovascular effects in the general population. A recent analysis on traffic noise and cardiovascular disease integrated into the review article impressively demonstrates that for every 10 dBA, the risk of developing cardiovascular diseases such as heart attack, stroke, and heart failure increases significantly by 3.2%.

The authors also explain in detail the possible effects of noise on changes in gene networks, epigenetic pathways, circadian rhythm, signaling along the neuronal-cardiovascular axis, oxidative stress, inflammation, and metabolism. Finally, current, and future noise protection strategies are described and the available evidence on noise as a cardiovascular risk factor is discussed.

"With an increasing proportion of the population exposed to harmful traffic noise even after the COVID pandemic has ended, noise control efforts and noise reduction laws are of great importance for future public health," summarizes the lead author of the paper, Prof. Dr. Thomas Münzel, Senior Professor at the University Medical Center Mainz. "It is also important for us that is now finally recognized as a risk factor for due to the strong evidence."

More information: Thomas Münzel et al, Transportation Noise Pollution and Cardiovascular Health, Circulation Research (2024). DOI: 10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.123.323584

Journal information: Circulation Research
Citation: Study argues traffic noise is a novel risk factor for cardiovascular diseases (2024, April 25) retrieved 24 June 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2024-04-traffic-noise-factor-cardiovascular-diseases.html
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