Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Public Swimming Pool, Cholrine, children's lungs

Swimming may harm infants' lungs

In recent news... http://www.reuters.com
Thursday June 7, 06:54 AM
Indoor pools 'may harm infants' lungs'

Infant swimming lessons in an indoor pool may have the unintended effect of raising some children's risk of asthma later on, new research suggests.

In a study of 341 schoolchildren, Belgian researchers found that the 43 children who had been enrolled in a swimming program as infants were about three times more likely to have asthma or suffer recurrent bouts of bronchitis than children who did not.

The problem, according to the researchers, is that chlorine byproducts may irritate infants' developing airways, causing changes that make them more susceptible to lung disease later in childhood.

Lead author Dr Albert Bernard and colleagues at the Catholic University of Louvain in Brussels report the findings in the journal Pediatrics.

Past studies have found that competitive swimmers and people who work around indoor pools tend to have elevated rates of asthma. Experts suspect that the air quality around pools - particularly indoor ones - is to blame.

When the chlorine used to disinfect pools combines with swimmers' sweat, saliva or urine, irritating chlorine byproducts are formed. One of these is a gas called trichloramine, which is released into the air, giving indoor pool areas their distinctive "chlorine" smell. Trichloramine is known to irritate the eyes and upper respiratory tract.

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