Münzel Thomas, Sørensen Mette, Lelieveld Jos, Landrigan Philip J, Kuntic Marin, Nieuwenhuijsen Mark, Miller Mark R, Schneider Alexandra, Daiber Andreas
Department of Cardiology, University Medical Center Mainz, Johannes Gutenberg University, Langenbeckstrasse 1, Mainz 55131, Germany.
Work, Environment and Cancer, Danish Cancer Institute, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Cardiovasc Res. 2025 Sep 29;121(11):1653-1678. doi: 10.1093/cvr/cvaf119.
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the leading cause of mortality globally, with over 20 million deaths each year. While traditional risk factors-such as hypertension, diabetes, smoking, and poor diet-are well-established, emerging evidence underscores the profound impact of environmental exposures on cardiovascular health. Air pollution, particularly fine particulate matter (PM2.5), contributes to approximately 8.3 million deaths annually, with over half attributed to CVD. Similarly, noise pollution, heat extremes, toxic chemicals, and light pollution significantly increase the risk of CVD through mechanisms involving oxidative stress, inflammation, and circadian disruption. Recent translational and epidemiological studies show that chronic exposure to transport noise increases the risk of myocardial infarction, stroke, and heart failure. Air pollution, even below regulatory thresholds, promotes atherosclerosis, vascular dysfunction, and cardiac events. Novel threats such as micro- and nano-plastics are emerging as contributors to vascular injury and systemic inflammation. Climate change exacerbates these risks, with heatwaves and wildfires further compounding the cardiovascular burden, especially among vulnerable populations. The cumulative effects of these exposures-often interacting with behavioural and socioeconomic risk factors-are inadequately addressed in current prevention strategies. The exposome framework offers a comprehensive approach to integrating lifelong environmental exposures into cardiovascular risk assessment and prevention. Mitigation requires systemic interventions including stricter pollution standards, noise regulations, sustainable urban design, and green infrastructure. Addressing environmental determinants of CVD is essential for reducing the global disease burden. This review calls for urgent policy action and for integrating environmental health into clinical practice to safeguard cardiovascular health in the Anthropocene.
心血管疾病(CVD)是全球主要的死亡原因,每年有超过2000万人死亡。虽然传统风险因素,如高血压、糖尿病、吸烟和不良饮食,已广为人知,但新出现的证据强调了环境暴露对心血管健康的深远影响。空气污染,尤其是细颗粒物(PM2.5),每年导致约830万人死亡,其中一半以上归因于心血管疾病。同样,噪音污染、极端高温、有毒化学物质和光污染通过涉及氧化应激、炎症和昼夜节律紊乱的机制,显著增加了患心血管疾病的风险。最近的转化研究和流行病学研究表明,长期暴露于交通噪音会增加心肌梗死、中风和心力衰竭的风险。即使低于监管阈值,空气污染也会促进动脉粥样硬化、血管功能障碍和心脏事件。微塑料和纳米塑料等新威胁正成为血管损伤和全身炎症的促成因素。气候变化加剧了这些风险,热浪和野火进一步加重了心血管负担,尤其是在弱势群体中。目前的预防策略未能充分解决这些暴露的累积影响,这些影响往往与行为和社会经济风险因素相互作用。暴露组框架提供了一种全面的方法,将终身环境暴露纳入心血管风险评估和预防。缓解需要系统性干预措施,包括更严格的污染标准、噪音法规、可持续城市设计和绿色基础设施。解决心血管疾病的环境决定因素对于减轻全球疾病负担至关重要。本综述呼吁采取紧急政策行动,并将环境健康纳入临床实践,以在人类世保护心血管健康。