HEPA Filters May Improve
Cardiovascular Health
02.15.08, 12:00 AM ET
FRIDAY, Feb. 15 (HealthDay News) -- A breath of filtered indoor
air may help your health,
according to researchers in Denmark.
Using high efficiency particle air (HEPA)
filters for just two days significantly improved a key measure
of cardiovascular health in healthy, nonsmoking elderly
individuals, according to a study published in the second
February issue of the American Journal of Respiratory and
Critical Care Medicine.
"Our main finding was a significant
improvement in the function of small finger blood vessels after
reduction of indoor air particles. This effect most likely
indicates a general improvement in the function of the inner
lining of small vessels, including those supplying the heart,"
Dr. Steffen Loft, of the Institute of Public Health in
Copenhagen, said in a prepared statement.
Abnormal function of the inner lining of small
vessels is known to be a predictor of dangerous or possibly
fatal cardiovascular events.
HEPA filtration removed about 60 percent of
the ultrafine, fine and coarse air particles in homes, according
to researchers, and was associated with an 8.1 percent
improvement in individual microvascular function (MVF).
"This suggests that indoor air filtration
represents a feasible means of reducing cardiovascular risk," he
said.
The researchers measured ambient airborne
particles in the homes of 21 nonsmoking couples, aged 60 to 75,
who lived close to heavily trafficked roads. Each couple used
air purifiers for two 48-hour periods. During one period, the
purifier was equipped with a HEPA filter, and during the other,
it ran without it. The size distribution and number
concentration of indoor air particles in each home were
continuously monitored.
Each couple's individual MVF was assessed
using a noninvasive finger sensor.
"We expected that removing air particles with
the HEPA filters would result in improvement of MVF, but we were
heartened and surprised by the extent it did, considering the
modest levels of particles in the indoor air of the homes of the
elderly," Loft said.