Interaction of Cooking-Generated Aerosols on the Human Nervous System and the Impact of Caloric Restriction Post-Exposure
Journal article, 2024

Background: The inhalation of cooking-generated aerosols could lead to translocation to the brain and impact its function; therefore, the effects of cooking-generated aerosols on healthy adults were investigated using an electroencephalograph (EEG) during the 2 h period post-exposure. Methods: To explore any changes from the impact of exposure to cooking-generated aerosols on the human brain due to the absence of food intake during exposure, we divided the study participants into three groups: (A) no food intake for 2 h (2 h-zero calorie intake), (B) non-zero calorie intake, and (C) control group (simulated cooking). Results: The ultrafine particle concentrations increased from 9.0 × 103 particles/cm3 at the background level to approximately 8.74 × 104 particles/cm3 during cooking. EEGs were recorded before cooking (step 1), 60 min after cooking (step 2), 90 min after cooking (step 3), and 120 min after cooking (step 4). Comparing the non-zero calorie group with the control group, it was concluded that exposure to cooking-generated aerosols resulted in a 12.82% increase in the alpha band two hours post-exposure, compared to pre-exposure. The results revealed that zero calorie intake after exposure mitigated the impacts of cooking-generated aerosols for the alpha, beta3, theta, and delta bands, while it exacerbated effects on the whole brain for the beta1 and beta2 bands. Conclusions: While these are short-term studies, long-term exposure to cooking-generated ultrafine particles can be established through successive short-term exposures. These results underscore the need for further research into the health impacts of cooking-generated aerosols and the importance of implementing strategies to mitigate exposure.

frying aerosols

zero calorie intake

EEG

ultrafine particles

Author

Motahareh Naseri

Nazarbayev University

Sahar Sadeghi

Nazarbayev University

Milad Malekipirbazari

Chalmers, Computer Science and Engineering (Chalmers), Data Science and AI

Sholpan Nurzhan

Nazarbayev University

Raikhangul Gabdrashova

Nazarbayev University

Zhibek Bekezhankyzy

Nazarbayev University

Reza Khanbabaie

University of British Columbia (UBC)

Byron Crape

Nazarbayev University School of Medicine

Dhawal Shah

Nazarbayev University

Mehdi Amouei Torkmahalleh

University of Illinois

Nutrients

2072-6643 (ISSN) 20726643 (eISSN)

Vol. 16 20 3525

Subject Categories

Environmental Health and Occupational Health

DOI

10.3390/nu16203525

PubMed

39458519

More information

Latest update

11/8/2024