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Monday, November 17, 2025

Multiple recent studies suggest that severe Alzheimer's pathology correlates to chronic exposure to PM2.5 and other particulates.

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Wood burners produce fine particulate pollution (PM2.5), which has severe effects on people's health. PM2.5 particles are inhaled deep into the lungs, where they pass into the bloodstream. https://urbanhealth.org.uk/insights/news/woodburning-health-effects

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-- Impact on Urban Health (@impurbanhealth.bsky.social) Nov 12, 2025 at 11:28 AM

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A coalition of USN Navy veterans is seeking an expansion of health care and disability benefits for toxic exposures linked to gases, chemicals and biological contaminants aboard submarines. They are also pushing for the USN to release findings from extensive atmospheric studies on submarines' sealed environments conducted more than 20 years ago that remain classified. There are over 150 toxins that sailors could encounter on submarines. Source: USN Submariners Health issues.

Beau Biden died of brain cancer, which POTUS Joe Biden believes was linked to toxic burn pits in Iraq. The nefarious Trumpf junta is pursuing a reduction of about 83,000 VA personnel and proposed significant budget cuts, despite a nominal funding increase in some areas.

In Cormac McCarthy's apocalyptic future novel The Road, survivors live in an ash and smoke-ruined atmosphere where plant life stopped growing. In Stephen King's future dystopian novel The Running Man, the nefarious government issues tiny nose plugs to insiders to protect them from the toxic air everybody else is unknowingly breathing. The film version much closer to the original novel than the Arnold Schwarzenegger-starring film version is out in theaters this year.


#1 | Posted by C0RI0LANUS at 2025-11-17 03:42 AM | Reply

Thats why I keep my air supply full of least 95% THC.. for "protection".

#2 | Posted by donnerboy at 2025-11-17 10:32 AM | Reply

Another [deeper dive] view ...

The Air You Breathe May Affect Your Alzheimer's Risk (March 2024)
www.alzinfo.org

... People who live in areas with lots of vehicle traffic and who breath in pollutants from diesel exhaust and other sources have brain changes that are tied to an increased risk of Alzheimer's disease. These findings, detailed in a recent study, add to growing evidence linking air pollution to brain decline.

For the new study, published in the journal Neurology, researchers at Emory University looked for signs of Alzheimer's disease in the brains of 224 deceased men and women in the Atlanta area who had donated their brains to science. Their average age at death was 76.

The researchers also looked at the home addresses of the donors at the time of death, and determined traffic-related air pollution levels near their homes in the years preceding their deaths. They focused on levels of PM2.5, the tiny pollutant particles smaller than 2.5 micrometers in diameter that can be particularly damaging to health. This fine particulate matter can enter the bloodstream where high levels are linked to an increased risk of heart attacks, stroke, respiratory problems and lung disease. These tiny particles may also enter the brain, and a growing body of research has linked them to an increased risk of dementia.

The investigators found that those people who lived in areas with high levels of traffic-related air pollution had higher amounts of amyloid plaques in their brains. The presence of amyloid plaques, which are formed by the clumping together of toxic beta-amyloid in the brain, is a hallmark of Alzheimer's disease. People with the highest exposure to fine particulate matter in the year before their death were nearly twice as likely to have higher levels of plaques, while those with higher exposure in the three years before death were 87 percent more likely to have higher levels of plaques. ...



#3 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-11-18 02:13 AM | Reply

I'm glad I live in clean air.

#4 | Posted by REDIAL at 2025-11-18 02:15 AM | Reply

Hi Redial: Lucky you, I guess you live far away from the oil industry up there: www.cbc.ca

BTW: Were you rooting for the Roughriders or the Alouettes in the Grey Bowl?

#5 | Posted by C0RI0LANUS at 2025-11-18 02:36 AM | Reply

I guess you live far away from the oil industry up there

I do.

Were you rooting for the Roughriders or the Alouettes in the Grey Bowl?

Other than a bit of golf, I pay no attention to sports.

#6 | Posted by REDIAL at 2025-11-18 02:51 AM | Reply

@#6 ... I do. ...

Unfortunately, here in southwest Connecticut, when the summer airflow is from the southwest, the skies turn gray, and people are advises to stay indoors.

#7 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-11-18 03:06 AM | Reply

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