Disease areas:
  • brain
Last updated:
Author(s):
Yujia Bao, Yongxuan Li, Ne Qiang, Yanqiu Zhou, Mike Z He, Chen Shen, Xiaobei Deng, Jie Yin, Lefei Han, Jinjun Ran
Publish date:
17 September 2025
Journal:
Environmental Science Processes & Impacts
PubMed ID:
40856181

Abstract

Divergent views remain regarding the health assessment of ambient nitrogen dioxide (NO2) exposure at low-level concentrations. To fill in some gaps, this study was designed to comprehensively estimate the effects of low-level NO2 exposure on the brain system. This study included 183 351 participants with ambient NO2 ≤ 20 μg m-3 at baseline from the UK Biobank and analyzed associations of NO2 exposure with neurodegenerative diseases and brain imaging traits through modeling. The results indicated that among populations exposed to ambient NO2 ≤ 20 μg m-3, an interquartile range (4.7 μg m-3) increase in NO2 exposure was associated with elevated incident risks of Alzheimer’s disease (hazard ratio 1.18; 95% confidence interval 1.05, 1.32) and vascular dementia (1.25; 95% confidence interval 1.07, 1.46), respectively. The associations were also observed with specific grey matter and white matter phenotypes. The findings suggest that updating a lower limit for ambient NO2 may yield significant benefits.

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