Indoor air pollution and human ocular diseases: Associated contaminants and underlying pathological mechanisms

People spend a long time indoors, especially young children. The risk of indoor pollution on human health is one of the current hotspots in environmental and public health. The human ocular surface is highly susceptible to indoor environment quality. Epidemiological data have linked human ophthalmol...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chemosphere (Oxford) 2023-01, Vol.311, p.137037, Article 137037
Hauptverfasser: Yang, Dan-Lei, Zhang, Zhen-Ning, Liu, Hai, Yang, Zi-Yue, Liu, Mi-Mi, Zheng, Qin-Xiang, Chen, Wei, Xiang, Ping
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:People spend a long time indoors, especially young children. The risk of indoor pollution on human health is one of the current hotspots in environmental and public health. The human ocular surface is highly susceptible to indoor environment quality. Epidemiological data have linked human ophthalmological disorders with exposure to indoor pollution. In this review, we summarized the adverse impacts of indoor pollution on the human ocular surface. Several studies demonstrated that indoor contaminants including particulate matter, volatile/semi-volatile organic compounds, heavy metals, and fuel combustion and cigarette smoke exposure were associated with the incidence of human dry eye, conjunctivitis, glaucoma, cataracts, age-related macular degeneration, and keratitis. In addition, toxicological investigations revealed that indoor pollution-induced induced chronic inflammation, oxidative damage, and disruption of tight junctions are the main underlying pathological mechanisms for ocular surface diseases. Taken together, this review may expand the understanding of pollution-induced eye disorder and highlight the importance of reducing associated contaminants to decrease their detrimental effects on human eyes. [Display omitted] •Indoor air pollution is linked to human ocular surface disease development.•PM, VOC, and cigarette smoke are responsible for ophthalmological disorders.•Dry eye, conjunctivitis, glaucoma, and keratitis are the most direct results of indoor pollution.•Chronic inflammation, oxidative stress, and disruption of tight junctions are the main pathological mechanisms.
ISSN:0045-6535
1879-1298
DOI:10.1016/j.chemosphere.2022.137037