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Wiley InterScience | |||||||
![]() Clinical & Experimental AllergyVolume 34 Issue 10, Pages 1507 - 1513 Published Online: 12 Oct 2004 © 2009 Blackwell Publishing Ltd The Official Journal of the British Society for Allergy & Clinical Immunology
Abstract | References | Full Text: HTML, PDF (Size: 132K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking REVIEW Impacts of climate change on aeroallergens: past and future Copyright © 2004 Blackwell Publishing Ltd KEYWORDS allergen • carbon dioxide • climate change • distribution • mould • plant • pollen • season • spore • temperature Summary
SummaryHuman activities are resulting in increases in atmospheric greenhouse gases, such as carbon dioxide, and changes in global climate. These, in turn, are likely to have had, and will continue to have, impacts on human health. While such impacts have received increasing attention in recent years, the impacts of climate change on aeroallergens and related allergic diseases have been somewhat neglected. Despite this, a number of studies have revealed potential impacts of climate change on aeroallergens that may have enormous clinical and public health significance. The purpose of this review is to synthesize this work and to outline a number of research challenges in this area. There is now considerable evidence to suggest that climate change will have, and has already had, impacts on aeroallergens. These include impacts on pollen amount, pollen allergenicity, pollen season, plant and pollen distribution, and other plant attributes. There is also some evidence of impacts on other aeroallergens, such as mould spores. There are many research challenges along the road to a more complete understanding of the impacts of climate change on aeroallergens and allergic diseases such as asthma and hayfever. It is important that public health authorities and allergy practitioners be aware of these changes in the environment, and that research scientists embrace the challenges that face further work in this area. Submitted 27 November 2003; revised 15 May 2004; accepted 20 May 2004 |