Pollution worldwide has been getting worse daily, and the consequences of humanity's actions are becoming more and more visible. According to a new study, air pollution particles can reach babies in the womb. Researchers found that soot nanoparticles can cross the placenta and get into the organs of fetuses.
Experts from the University of Aberdeen and Hasselt University, Belgium, said their finding was "especially concerning" because key organ development occurs when babies are growing in the uterus.
Researchers examined 60 mothers and their babies in Aberdeen and the Grampian region in Scotland. They also analyzed tissue samples from 36 fetuses that had been aborted between seven and 20 weeks of gestation.
The team found evidence of "black carbon particles" – also known as soot particles – in umbilical cord blood, which shows that the particles can cross the placenta.
Soot particles were present in all mothers and newborns. The level of particles found was linked to the amount of air pollution the mother was exposed to during pregnancy.
The research team also found the presence of such particles in the livers, lungs and brains of the aborted fetuses. Black carbon particles were found in all tissue samples analyzed.
The scientists warned that the particles could be seen in fetuses as early as the first trimester of pregnancy. This is the first time it has been shown that black carbon nanoparticles can be found in developing fetuses.
Black carbon is one of the many particles and gases emitted when diesel, coal and other biomass fuels are burned. It is part of the fine particulate air pollution known as PM 2.5.
"We found that maternally inhaled carbonaceous air pollution particles can cross the placenta and then translocate into human fetal organs during gestation," the authors wrote in the journal Lancet Planetary Health.
"These findings are especially concerning because this window of exposure is key to organ development."
Professor Tim Nawrot, from Hasselt University, said: "We know that exposure to air pollution during pregnancy and infancy has been linked with stillbirth, pre-term birth, low-weight babies and disturbed brain development, with consequences persisting throughout life.
"We show in this study that the number of black carbon particles that get into the mother is passed on proportionally to the placenta and into the baby.
"This means that air quality regulation should recognize this transfer during gestation and act to protect the most susceptible stages of human development."
Professor Paul Fowler, from the University of Aberdeen, added: "We all worried that if nanoparticles were getting into the fetus, then they might be directly affecting its development in the womb.
"What we have shown for the first time is that black carbon air pollution nanoparticles not only get into the first and second trimester placenta but then also find their way into the organs of the developing fetus, including the liver and lungs.
"What is even more worrying is that these black carbon particles also get into the developing human brain - this means that it is possible for these nanoparticles to directly interact with control systems within human fetal organs and cells."