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| Photo Credit: Pixabay |
One of the most common byproducts of the burning of fossil fuels, phenanthrene, causes heart arrhythmias in mice, proving for the first time it is toxic to mammals, new research has discovered.
The study, led by The University of Manchester in collaboration with the University of Bristol and Moscow State University, and funded by the British Heart Foundation, is published today in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives.
Thanks to earlier work by one of the lead authors Professor Holly Shiels from Manchester in conjunction with scientists at the University of Bristol, Moscow State University, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association (NOAA) and Stanford University, phenanthrene's toxicity to the hearts of fish and crustaceans (crayfish) has been well established.
But now the team has discovered the change also occurs in healthy mouse hearts when directly exposed to phenanthrene, mimicking what happens when we breathe in pollution.
Professor Holly Shiels said: "We've known that phenanthrene is causally linked to cardiotoxicity in fish for many years - scientists recognized this following the disastrous impact of the Exxon Valdez oil disaster in Alaska in 1989.


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