City
Epaper

Study links colourless, odourless gas with the rise in lung cancers in non-smokers

By IANS | Updated: April 11, 2024 10:20 IST

New York, April 11 Lung cancer has traditionally been thought of as a "smoker's disease". However, the tremendous ...

Open in App

New York, April 11 Lung cancer has traditionally been thought of as a "smoker's disease". However, the tremendous rise of the deadly disease in non-smokers indicates their long-term, high exposures to radon gas, according to a study.

Radon gas is colourless and odourless and emitted from the breakdown of radioactive material naturally occurring underground that then seeps through building foundations. The gas can silently linger and accumulate in people's lungs and homes, and cannot be detected unless tested.

Data indicates that about 15-20 per cent of newly diagnosed lung cancers occur in people who have never smoked, many of whom are in their 40s or 50s.

"Anyone with lungs can develop lung cancer, and as a community, we should be aware and concerned about radon exposure because it's thought to be one of the leading causes of lung cancer in never-smokers -- and there is something we can do to reduce our risk," said David Carbone, a thoracic medical oncologist at The Ohio State University in the US.

Carbone informed that there are relatively simple tests that can measure radon in the home and aid in actions to reduce its exposure.

This includes installing outside the home a radon remediation system that sucks air from the basement, where radon gas typically lingers. Increasing airflow by opening windows using fans/venting in your home, and sealing cracks in the floors, walls, and foundation is also important.

Further, Carbone called for potential legislation to require radon testing at schools, at places of business, and during home sales to help reduce community risk. The effects of radon on the lungs are cumulative and can be delayed by decades.

"So your children playing in your basement or going to school today, exposed to unknown levels of radon, could be at risk for developing lung cancer 10, 20, 30 years from now," Carbone said.

"And because the gas is totally colourless and odourless, you would have no idea you were being exposed unless you knew the importance of proactively testing."

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

Entertainment"My mother's favourite place...": Zayed Khan, Sussane offer prayers at Shirdi Sai Baba Temple

BusinessJaideep Mirchandani, Group Chairman Sky One, Lauds 'Fare Se Fursat' Initiative by the Government of India

BusinessReady to Transform Your Trading? See Why 3 Million Traders Trust Booming Bulls VIP

BusinessBeyond Career Counselling: CareerNest Unveils India's First Human-Centred Career Model Based on Neuroscience and Fingerprint Science

TechnologyNifty-500 earnings grow 15 pc in Q2, led by oil and gas stocks

Health Realted Stories

HealthNCPEDP urges health insurance for disabled under Ayushman Bharat 

HealthConstant Gas Problem? Make These Diet Changes to Improve Digestion Instantly

HealthLocalising strategies, making precision policy key to boost family planning in India

HealthJharkhand HC seeks report within 10 days on facilities at RIMS, team to conduct inspection

HealthNeed to foster greater innovation in pharma sector: Punya Salila Srivastava