
The soot in polluted air may get as far as the inside of the womb, a small study suggests.
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Samples of placenta collected after women in Belgium gave birth revealed soot, or black carbon, embedded within the tissue on the side that faces the baby, researchers report online September 17 in Nature Communications. The amount of black carbon in the placenta correlated with a woman’s air pollution exposure, estimated based on emissions of black carbon near her home.
Black carbon particles embedded in placental tissue released white light (white dot, pointed out by the arrow) after a laser illumination technique. Collagen appears as red and placental tissue as green.H. BOVÉ ET AL/NATURE COMMUNICATIONS 2019“The black carbon particles truly stand out uniquely” from the rest of the tissue, says Bryan Spring, a biomedical physicist from Northeastern University in Boston who was not involved in the work.