Swimming Pools And Child Asthma:even
Open-Air Pools Seem To Increase The Risk Finds A Belgian Study
Warnings about adverse effects of chlorinated swimming pools, particularly
where they affect children's airways, are becoming increasingly prominent
in the scientific literature. The harmful impact of air breathed in close
to the chlorinated water could even be one cause of the upsurge in child
asthma recorded in the industrialised countries.
The 17th Congress of the European Respiratory Society (ERS), where this
issue was the subject of several communications, has just added a new
element to the discussions: children who use chlorinated open-air swimming
pools have an increased risk of developing asthma.
Asthma is known to be one of the commonest chronic conditions, affecting
over 300 million people worldwide, particularly those who are prone to
allergies.
It has multiple causes, but it appears increasingly that chlorinated
swimming pools are a factor linked with an increased risk of asthma onset.
Swimming instructors and poolside staff are in the front line, as reported
recently in the European Respiratory Journal (ERJ) by a Netherlands
team, but children and adolescents are also directly threatened.
Asthma rates doubled
This is illustrated by young competitive swimmers, as seen in the study
presented to the Congress by Vito Brusasco, Giovanni Rossi and their
teams, of the University of Genoa and Gaslini Hospital in Italy. The
authors studied thirty adolescents, with an average age of 14, who had not
previously been diagnosed with asthma. They measured their level of
sensitisation to typical airborne allergens and their degree of bronchial
hyperreactivity; these two elements are generally considered predictors of
asthma onset.
The results presented to the ERS Congress clearly demonstrate a risk to
the young swimmers in regular training for competitions. The Italian team
found that 73% of them were sensitised to airborne allergens, a level
almost double that of the general population, and over half of them (17
subjects) suffered from bronchial hyperreactivity.
"We believe that repeated exposure to high concentrations of chlorine
in the ten centimetres of air above the water's surface is damaging to the
airways", the authors told the Congress. "It could favour
allergen sensitisation and contribute to the development of bronchial
hyperreactivity as well as the onset of asthma symptoms in children."
Open-air swimming pools now also suspected
It was a Belgian team that brought really astounding news to the Congress.
The received wisdom was that harmful levels of airborne chlorine were only
found in covered swimming pools: it seemed logical that the enclosed air
would be rich in lung-irritating gases, especially chloramines, produced
by the chemical reaction between chlorine and various organic substances,
including sweat, urine and saliva. Yet an original study presented to the
ERS Congress by Marc Nickmilder, Alfred Bernard and Catherine Voisin, of
the Catholic University of Louvain's Department of Toxicology, shows that
this risk can also affect regular users of open-air pools.
The Louvain team examined 847 adolescents, aged 15 years on average,
enrolled at three Belgian secondary schools. One school was chosen because
the timetabled swimming lessons took place in a non-chlorinated pool,
disinfected by means of a copper-silver ionisation system, which meant its
pupils could be used as a control group.
The study was conducted on the basis of both questionnaires completed by
parents and blood tests. The questionnaires elicited information on family
antecedents for asthma or allergies, the adolescent's lifestyle and, above
all, the number of hours spent in chlorinated and non-chlorinated,
enclosed and open-air pools.
The blood tests sought to determine levels of immunoglobin E (IgE), an
antibody associated with an increased risk of allergies and asthma.
Risk multiplied up to nine times
The conclusions revealed in Stockholm by Nickmilder leave little room for
doubt. "Use of open-air swimming pools correlates strongly with atopy
levels as measured by serum IgE concentration and considerably increases
the asthma risk", the researcher explains.
The results presented to the Congress show that adolescents who, up to the
time of the study, had spent a total of more than 500 hours in open-air
swimming pools, had a risk of developing asthma three times higher than
those who had never swum in a chlorinated pool.
"The relative risk is as much as nine times in subjects with high IgE,
even where the parents have no asthmatic antecedents", Bernard
emphasised at the Congress.
So this sounds an important warning, coming as it does at a time when
young children are increasingly being taken to swimming pools. Following
hard on the heels of a discovery by the same team that so-called
"water-babies" had higher asthma rates than their peers at age
ten, the latest revelations in Stockholm should lead to some serious
reconsideration of the issues.
"We would recommend that open-air pools should not be too heavily
chlorinated, especially if young children use them", the Belgian team
told the Congress
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