Air Pollution Raises Cardiac Arrest Risk: Study Urges Action on Environmental Health

November 14, 2025
Air Pollution Raises Cardiac Arrest Risk: Study Urges Action on Environmental Health
  • Particulate matter also raises risk on the day of exposure, with PM2.5 tied to a 3% increase and PM10 to about 2.5%.

  • Urban areas show stronger associations, but rural towns are affected too, with effects most pronounced during warmer months, hinting at heat-pollution interactions.

  • Associations appear even below current legal pollutant limits, suggesting there may be no safe exposure threshold for this outcome.

  • The authors frame air quality as a short-term cardiovascular risk factor and urge integrating environmental data into health forecasting and emergency response.

  • Project partners include the German Aerospace Center and the Group on Earth Observation, coordinated by the World Meteorological Organization.

  • Policy implications point toward prevention and management during high-pollution periods, with ties to the CLIMA-CARE project using satellite data to analyze environmental impacts on health and emergency services in Lombardy.

  • Lead author Amruta Umakant Mahakalkar and colleagues advocate preventive adaptation and a One-Health approach to address climate-related health risks at the population level.

  • The study integrates satellite data and earth observation to relate air quality to cardiac risk, providing a framework for health agencies and policymakers.

  • Overall, the findings emphasize immediate cardiovascular risk from air pollution and the need to operationalize environmental data in health planning for Lombardy.

  • A Politecnico di Milano study of 37,613 out-of-hospital cardiac arrests in Lombardy from 2016 to 2019 links daily air pollutant levels to cardiac risk.

  • Researchers used Copernicus satellite data to measure NO2, PM2.5, PM10, O3, and CO and applied spatio-temporal models to identify associations with cardiac events.

  • The analysis shows NO2 has a strong link to risk, with a 10 μg/m³ rise associated with a 7% increase in cardiac arrest risk over the next 96 hours.

Summary based on 1 source


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