AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines the link between high rates of SARS-CoV-2 infections and surface air pollution in the Milan metropolitan area during January-April 2020.
  • It finds that urban air pollutants, specifically ozone and nitrogen dioxide, may significantly influence the spread and lethality of COVID-19, highlighting positive correlations between ozone levels and increased infection rates.
  • The paper suggests that the unique characteristics of the virus, particularly its spike protein, may facilitate its attachment to airborne pollutants, raising concerns about their role in virus transmission in polluted urban environments.

Article Abstract

This paper investigates the correlation between the high level of coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 infection accelerated transmission and lethality, and surface air pollution in Milan metropolitan area, Lombardy region in Italy. For January-April 2020 period, time series of daily average inhalable gaseous pollutants ozone (O) and nitrogen dioxide (NO), together climate variables (air temperature, relative humidity, wind speed, precipitation rate, atmospheric pressure field and Planetary Boundary Layer) were analyzed. In spite of being considered primarily transmitted by indoor bioaerosols droplets and infected surfaces or direct human-to-human personal contacts, it seems that high levels of urban air pollution, and climate conditions have a significant impact on SARS-CoV-2 diffusion. Exhibited positive correlations of ambient ozone levels and negative correlations of NO with the increased rates of COVID-19 infections (Total number, Daily New positive and Total Deaths cases), can be attributed to airborne bioaerosols distribution. The results show positive correlation of daily averaged O with air temperature and inversely correlations with relative humidity and precipitation rates. Viral genome contains distinctive features, including a unique N-terminal fragment within the spike protein, which allows coronavirus attachment on ambient air pollutants. At this moment it is not clear if through airborne diffusion, in the presence of outdoor and indoor aerosols, this protein "spike" of the new COVID-19 is involved in the infectious agent transmission from a reservoir to a susceptible host during the highest nosocomial outbreak in some agglomerated industrialized urban areas like Milan is. Also, in spite of collected data for cold season (winter-early spring) period, when usually ozone levels have lower values than in summer, the findings of this study support possibility as O can acts as a COVID-19 virus incubator. Being a novel pandemic coronavirus version, it might be ongoing during summer conditions associated with higher air temperatures, low relative humidity and precipitation levels.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7274116PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.140005DOI Listing

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