Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
What’s in That Wildfire Smoke, and Why Is It So Bad for Your Lungs?
The-Conversation
By The Conversation
Published 4 years ago on
August 22, 2020

Share

If I dare to give the coronavirus credit for anything, I would say it has made people more conscious of the air they breathe.

A friend texted me this week after going for a jog in the foothills near Boise, Idaho, writing: “My lungs are burning … explain what’s happening!!!”

Luke Montrose

The Conversation

A wildfire was burning to the east of town – one of dozens of fires that were sending smoke and ash through communities in hot, dry western states. As an environmental toxicologist, I research how air pollution, particularly wood smoke, impacts human health and disease.

I gave my friend the short answer: The state had issued a yellow, or moderate, air quality index warning due in part to wildfires. The high temperature for the day was expected to reach 100 degrees Fahrenheit, and it was already approaching 90. That combination of high temperatures and elevated levels of particles from a fire can affect even healthy lungs. For someone with lung damage or respiratory illness, moderate levels of smoke particulate can exacerbate respiratory problems.

That’s only the start of the story of how wildfire smoke affects humans who breathe it. The rest, and how to stay healthy, is important to understand as the western wildfire season picks up.

What’s in Wildfire Smoke?

What exactly is in a wildfire’s smoke depends on a few key things: what’s burning – grass, brush or trees; the temperature – is it flaming or just smoldering; and the distance between the person breathing the smoke and the fire producing it.

The distance affects the ability of smoke to “age,” meaning to be acted upon by the sun and other chemicals in the air as it travels. Aging can make it more toxic. Importantly, large particles like what most people think of as ash do not typically travel that far from the fire, but small particles, or aerosols, can travel across continents.

Smoke from wildfires obscures the California sky on Aug. 19, 2020. (Lauren Dauphin/NASA Earth Observatory)

Smoke from wildfires contains thousands of individual compounds, including carbon monoxide, volatile organic compounds (VOCs), carbon dioxide, hydrocarbons and nitrogen oxides. The most prevalent pollutant by mass is particulate matter less than 2.5 micrometers in diameter, roughly 50 times smaller than a grain of sand. Its prevalence is one reason health authorities issue air quality warnings using PM2.5 as the metric.

What Does That Smoke Do to Human Bodies?

There is another reason PM2.5 is used to make health recommendations: It defines the cutoff for particles that can travel deep into the lungs and cause the most damage.

The human body is equipped with natural defense mechanisms against particles bigger than PM2.5. As I tell my students, if you have ever coughed up phlegm or blown your nose after being around a campfire and discovered black or brown mucus in the tissue, you have witnessed these mechanisms firsthand.

The really small particles bypass these defenses and disturb the air sacks where oxygen crosses over into the blood. Fortunately, we have specialized immune cells present in the air sacks called macrophages. It’s their job to seek out foreign material and remove or destroy it. However, studies have shown that repeated exposure to elevated levels of wood smoke can suppress macrophages, leading to increases in lung inflammation.

What Does That Mean for COVID-19 Symptoms?

Dose, frequency and duration are important when it comes to smoke exposure. Short-term exposure can irritate the eyes and throat. Long-term exposure to wildfire smoke over days or weeks, or breathing in heavy smoke, can raise the risk of lung damage and may also contribute to cardiovascular problems. Considering that it is the macrophage’s job to remove foreign material – including smoke particles and pathogens – it is reasonable to make a connection between smoke exposure and risk of viral infection.

Recent evidence suggests that long-term exposure to PM2.5 may make the coronavirus more deadly. A nationwide study found that even a small increase in PM2.5 from one U.S. county to the next was associated with a large increase in the death rate from COVID-19.

Wildfire smoke pours over palm trees lining a street in Azusa, Calif., on Aug. 13, 2020. (AP Images/Marcio Jose Sanchez)

What Can You Do to Stay Healthy?

The advice I gave my friend who had been running while smoke was in the air applies to just about anyone downwind from a wildfire.

Stay informed about air quality by identifying local resources for air quality alerts, information about active fires, and recommendations for better health practices.

If possible, avoid being outside or doing strenuous activity, like running or cycling, when there is an air quality warning for your area.

Be aware that not all face masks protect against smoke particles. In the context of COVID-19, the best data currently suggests that a cloth mask benefits public health, especially for those around the mask wearer, but also to some extent for the person wearing the mask. However, most cloth masks will not capture small wood smoke particles. That requires an N95 mask in conjunction with fit testing for the mask and training in how to wear it. Without a proper fit, N95s do not work as well.

[Deep knowledge, daily. Sign up for The Conversation’s newsletter.]

Establish a clean space. Some communities in western states have offered “clean spaces” programs that help people take refuge in buildings with clean air and air conditioning. However, during the pandemic, being in an enclosed space with others can create other health risks. At home, a person can create clean and cool spaces using a window air conditioner and a portable air purifier.

The EPA also advises people to avoid anything that contributes to indoor air pollutants. That includes vacuuming that can stir up pollutants, as well as burning candles, firing up gas stoves and smoking.The Conversation

Luke Montrose, Assistant Professor of Community and Environmental Health, Boise State University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

Trump Gave Interior Nominee One Directive for a Half-Billion Acres of US Land: ‘Drill’

DON'T MISS

Fresno State Gets $500K Grant for Students Facing Homelessness

DON'T MISS

NATO and Ukraine to Hold Emergency Talks After Russia’s Attack With New Hypersonic Missile

DON'T MISS

Many in Gaza Are Eating Just Once a Day, as Hunger Spreads Amid Aid Issues

DON'T MISS

Norwegian Student Arrested on Charges of Spying on US for Russia

DON'T MISS

Eagles Seek to Extend Win Streak in Prime-Time Clash With Resurgent Rams

DON'T MISS

Nick Chubb Plows Through Heavy Snow as Browns Beat Steelers

DON'T MISS

German Auto Supplier Bosch to Cut 5,500 Jobs in Further Sign of Carmakers’ Woes

DON'T MISS

Woman Found Dead in Fresno. Homicide Investigation Underway.

DON'T MISS

Supreme Court Allows Multibillion-Dollar Class Action to Proceed Against Meta

UP NEXT

$165 Billion Revenue Error Continues to Haunt California’s Budget

UP NEXT

How About an Honest Conversation About the Range of Light Monument Proposal?

UP NEXT

Fresno Doctors Will Pay $2.4 Million to Settle Kickback Allegations, DOJ Says

UP NEXT

How Trump Can Earn a Place in History That He Did Not Expect

UP NEXT

‘Woke’ Terminology Not Commonly Used by Americans: YouGov Survey

UP NEXT

Thousands of University of California Workers Go on 2-Day Strike Over Wages, Staff Shortages

UP NEXT

Demography Drives Destiny and Right Now California Is Losing

UP NEXT

Defining Deviancy Down. And Down. And Down.

UP NEXT

How Three Trump Policy Decrees Could Affect California Farmers

UP NEXT

Donald Trump Is Already Starting to Fail

Many in Gaza Are Eating Just Once a Day, as Hunger Spreads Amid Aid Issues

15 minutes ago

Norwegian Student Arrested on Charges of Spying on US for Russia

24 minutes ago

Eagles Seek to Extend Win Streak in Prime-Time Clash With Resurgent Rams

25 minutes ago

Nick Chubb Plows Through Heavy Snow as Browns Beat Steelers

28 minutes ago

German Auto Supplier Bosch to Cut 5,500 Jobs in Further Sign of Carmakers’ Woes

32 minutes ago

Woman Found Dead in Fresno. Homicide Investigation Underway.

32 minutes ago

Supreme Court Allows Multibillion-Dollar Class Action to Proceed Against Meta

37 minutes ago

Brock Purdy’s Status for the 49ers in Doubt This Week Because of Sore Shoulder

42 minutes ago

JD Vance Is Leaving the Senate for the Vice Presidency. That’s Set Off a Scramble for His Ohio Seat

1 hour ago

A Proposed Deal on Climate Cash at UN Summit Highlights Split Between Rich and Poor Nations

1 hour ago

Trump Gave Interior Nominee One Directive for a Half-Billion Acres of US Land: ‘Drill’

BISMARCK, N.D. — Donald Trump assigned Doug Burgum a singular mission in nominating the governor of oil-rich North Dakota to lead an agency ...

3 minutes ago

3 minutes ago

Trump Gave Interior Nominee One Directive for a Half-Billion Acres of US Land: ‘Drill’

7 minutes ago

Fresno State Gets $500K Grant for Students Facing Homelessness

9 minutes ago

NATO and Ukraine to Hold Emergency Talks After Russia’s Attack With New Hypersonic Missile

15 minutes ago

Many in Gaza Are Eating Just Once a Day, as Hunger Spreads Amid Aid Issues

24 minutes ago

Norwegian Student Arrested on Charges of Spying on US for Russia

Rams
25 minutes ago

Eagles Seek to Extend Win Streak in Prime-Time Clash With Resurgent Rams

28 minutes ago

Nick Chubb Plows Through Heavy Snow as Browns Beat Steelers

32 minutes ago

German Auto Supplier Bosch to Cut 5,500 Jobs in Further Sign of Carmakers’ Woes

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend