PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Invisible indoor threats: emerging household contaminants and their growing risks to human health

2025-12-12
(Press-News.org) Indoor dust, air and everyday products are exposing people to a growing mix of “new contaminants” inside homes, schools and workplaces, according to a new perspective published in the journal New Contaminants. The authors warn that these emerging chemicals may quietly increase the risk of heart disease, cancer and developmental problems while remaining largely unregulated and poorly monitored indoors.

Hidden pollution indoors

People now spend about 90 percent of their time indoors, yet most pollution research and standards still focus on outdoor air. The paper highlights that indoor spaces have complex mixtures of chemicals from building materials, furnishings, cosmetics, cleaning agents and electronics that can linger and transform over time. Because modern buildings are more airtight to save energy, pollutants released indoors can accumulate and lead to long term exposure.​

“In many buildings indoor pollution can be more severe than what we measure outside and that is especially worrying for children and older adults who rarely leave these environments” says corresponding author Wei Du of Kunming University of Science and Technology. “Our daily routines bring us into constant contact with chemical residues in the air, dust and on surfaces even when we cannot see or smell them.”​

What are “new contaminants”

Unlike traditional indoor pollutants such as formaldehyde or carbon monoxide, new contaminants include persistent organic pollutants, endocrine disrupting chemicals, antibiotics and microplastics that have only recently come under scrutiny. These substances can be released from shampoos, sunscreens, plastics, carpets, paints, toys, electronics and specialized materials used in offices or childcare centers. Once indoors they can enter the body through inhalation, ingestion of dust or skin contact and have been detected in blood, urine, breast milk and even human bone marrow.​

Why they may be more dangerous

The authors emphasize that indoor surfaces and dust act like chemical reactors where contaminants can change into new compounds that may be even more persistent or toxic than the originals. For example, reactions driven by indoor light, ozone and other oxidants can turn flame retardants or fragrance ingredients into derivatives with stronger neurotoxic or endocrine disrupting effects. These processes make it harder to predict health risks using outdoor studies alone and point to the need for indoor specific research.​

Call for standards and protection

The perspective calls for systematic monitoring of new contaminants in different indoor settings including homes, schools, hospitals, offices and recreational facilities to build a comprehensive database for regulators. The authors argue that high resolution measurements, mechanistic studies of chemical transformations and targeted toxicology work are urgently needed to inform next generation indoor air standards. “Protecting human health increasingly means looking inward at the places where we live, learn and work and treating indoor environments as a critical frontier for pollution control” says co corresponding author Bo Pan.​

 

=== 

Journal reference: Wang J, Zhou X, Fu N, Zhou S, Yang S, et al. 2025. New contaminants in indoor environments: occurrence, transformation, and health risks. New Contaminants 1: e017  

https://www.maxapress.com/article/doi/10.48130/newcontam-0025-0018  

=== 

About the Journal:

New Contaminants is an open-access journal focusing on research related to emerging pollutants and their remediation.

Follow us on Facebook, X, and Bluesky. 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Adding antibody treatment to chemo boosts outcomes for children with rare cancer

2025-12-12
Children with a rare form of cancer called neuroblastoma which hasn’t responded to initial treatment or that has relapsed may benefit from adding antibody treatment to usual chemotherapy, according to new results from a clinical trial.   The results of the BEACON phase 2 trial carried out by an international consortium of researchers, coordinated by the University of Birmingham’s Cancer Research UK Clinical Trials Unit. Published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology found that among children who have a high risk form cancer called neuroblastoma, using a monoclonal antibody treatment called dinutuximab beta ...

Germline pathogenic variants among women without a history of breast cancer

2025-12-12
About The Study: In this secondary analysis of the WISDOM trial, a randomized clinical trial that enrolled women without breast cancer ages 40 to 74, criteria-independent genetic testing in a pragmatic trial identified a substantial number of women with clinically actionable results, many of whom would not have qualified for genetic testing under current guidelines. These findings support broader access to genetic testing as part of personalized breast cancer risk assessment. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Lisa Madlensky, ...

Tanning beds triple melanoma risk, potentially causing broad DNA damage

2025-12-12
Study analyzed thousands of medical records to compare melanoma rates in tanning bed users vs. non-users, and sequenced 182 skin biopsies from tanning bed users and controls Tanning bed users carried double the mutation burden of controls In users, mutations appeared even in body areas that don’t get much sun exposure CHICAGO ---Tanning bed use is tied to almost a threefold increase in melanoma risk, and for the first time, scientists have shown how these devices cause melanoma-linked DNA damage across nearly the entire skin surface, reports a new study led by Northwestern Medicine and University of California, San ...

Unique bond identified as key to viral infection speed

2025-12-12
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Viruses are typically described as tiny, perfectly geometric shells that pack genetic material with mathematical precision, but new research led by scientists at Penn State reveals a deliberate imbalance in their shape that helps them infect their hosts.  The finding, the researchers say, not only illuminates a fundamental viral strategy but also opens doors for antiviral drug design and molecular delivery technologies critical for vaccines, cancer therapies, medication development and ...

Indoor tanning makes youthful skin much older on a genetic level

2025-12-12
Tanning bed users are known to have a higher risk of skin cancer, but for the first time researchers have found that young indoor tanners undergo genetic changes that can lead to more mutations in their skin cells than people twice their age.   The study, which was led by UC San Francisco and Northwestern University, appears Dec. 12 in Science Advances.   “We found that tanning bed users in their 30s and 40s had even more mutations than people in the general population who were in their 70s and ...

Mouse model sheds new light on the causes and potential solutions to human GI problems linked to muscular dystrophy

2025-12-12
Myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1) is the most common form of adult-onset muscular dystrophy, affecting about 1 in 8,000 people. While it is well known for causing muscle weakness and stiffness, DM1 also affects other organs, including the brain, heart and gastrointestinal (GI) tract. Although around 80% of people with DM1 experience GI problems that greatly reduce their quality of life, including difficulty swallowing, delayed stomach emptying, constipation and severe conditions like intestinal obstruction, the underlying causes remain understudied. To shed light onto the causes and potential solutions to ...

The Journal of Nuclear Medicine ahead-of-print tip sheet: December 12, 2025

2025-12-12
Reston, VA (December 12, 2025)—New research has been published ahead-of-print by The Journal of Nuclear Medicine (JNM). JNM is published by the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging, an international scientific and medical organization dedicated to advancing nuclear medicine, molecular imaging, and theranostics—precision medicine that allows diagnosis and treatment to be tailored to individual patients in order to achieve the best possible outcomes. Summaries of the newly published research articles are provided below. Tracking Kidney Cancer Spread with a New Targeted Imaging Tool This study explored whether two biomarkers—CD70 ...

Smarter tools for peering into the microscopic world

2025-12-12
The microscopic organisms that fill our bodies, soils, oceans and atmosphere play essential roles in human health and the planet’s ecosystems. Yet even with modern DNA sequencing, figuring out what these microbes are and how they are related to one another remains extremely difficult. In a pair of new studies, researchers at Arizona State University introduce powerful tools that make this work easier, more accurate and far more scalable. One tool improves how scientists build microbial family trees. The other provides a software foundation used worldwide to analyze ...

Applications open for funding to conduct research in the Kinsey Institute archives

2025-12-12
The Kinsey Institute invites applications for two competitive research awards that provide in-person access to the Institute’s internationally renowned Library & Special Collections at Indiana University Bloomington. These awards support original scholarship drawing on one of the world’s most significant archives on sexuality, relationships, gender, and human behavior—spanning manuscripts, publications, fine art, photography, ephemera, and scientific data across disciplines including biology, medicine, psychology, anthropology, ...

Global measure underestimates the severity of food insecurity

2025-12-12
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) — Before you can address a problem, you need to understand its scope. That’s why the United Nations developed the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification System. Aid organizations rely on analyses from this global partnership, which monitors and classifies the severity of food insecurity to help target assistance where and when it is most needed. These analyses are multifaceted and complex — often taking place in regions where data is scarce and conditions are deteriorating — and stakeholders tend to assume ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

The (metabolic) cost of life

CFRI special issue call for papers: New Frontiers in Sustainable Finance

HKU Engineering scholar demonstrates the smallest all-printed infrared photodetectors to date

Precision empowerment for brain "eavesdropping": CAS team develops triple-electrode integrated functional electrode for simultaneous monitoring of neural signals and chemical transmitters during sleep

Single-capillary endothelial dysfunction resolved by optoacoustic mesoscopy

HKU three research projects named among ‘Top 10 Innovation & Technology News in Hong Kong 2025’ showcasing excellence in research and technology transfer

NLRSeek: A reannotation-based pipeline for mining missing NLR genes in sequenced genomes

A strand and whole genome duplication–aware collinear gene identification tool

Light storage in light cages: A revolutionary approach to on-chip quantum memories

Point spread function decoupling in computational fluorescence microscopy

BacPhase: Long-insert paired-end sequencing for bin marker construction and genome phasing

GmWOX1 regulates the mediolateral polarity of compound leaves in soybean

ChargeFabrica: An open-source simulation tool that aims to accelerate search for high performance perovskite solar cells

High levels of ADAR overexpression induce abundant and stochastic off-target RNA editing in rice protoplasts

On-demand upgraded recycling of polyethylene and construction of sustainable multifunctional materials based on the "LEGO" strategy

New "Stomata in-sight" system allows scientists to watch plants breathe in real-time

Anorexia nervosa may result in long-term skeletal muscle impairment

Narrative-based performance reviews deemed fairest by employees

New insights reveal how advanced oxidation can tackle emerging water pollutants

New review shows how biomass can deliver low-carbon gaseous fuels at scale

Climate change is quietly rewriting the world’s nitrogen cycle, with high stakes for food and the environment

Study finds SGLT-2 inhibitors linked to lower risk of diabetic foot nerve damage

Microbes may hold the key to brain evolution

Study examines how the last two respiratory pandemics rapidly spread through cities

Gender stereotypes reflect the division of labor between women and men across nations

Orthopedics can play critical role in identifying intimate partner violence

Worms as particle sweepers

Second spider-parasitic mite described in Brazil

January 2026 issues of APA journals feature new research on autism, pediatric anxiety, psychedelic therapy, suicide prevention and more

Private equity acquired more than 500 autism centers over the past decade, new study shows

[Press-News.org] Invisible indoor threats: emerging household contaminants and their growing risks to human health