This shows a head and smokestacks.
High-resolution MRI data reveals that long-term exposure to low-level traffic exhaust and fine particulate matter causes silent, visible structural damage to the brain before overt cognitive symptoms manifest. Credit: Neuroscience News

Low-Level Air Pollution Linked to Cognitive Decline, Brain Damage

Summary: A new study reveals that long-term exposure to everyday air pollution is directly linked to poorer cognitive function and visible brain damage. Conducted as part of the Canadian Alliance for Healthy Hearts and Minds (CAHHM) study, researchers analyzed nearly 7,000 middle-aged adults across five Canadian provinces.

Remarkably, the findings demonstrate that even low levels of fine particulate matter and nitrogen dioxide, well within international “clean air” standards, are associated with reduced scores in memory, comprehension, and mental processing speed, with women showing heightened vulnerability to visible structural brain damage on MRI scans.

Key Facts

  • The Low-Exposure Threshold: Unlike previous research targeting heavily polluted global regions, this study proves that cognitive damage occurs even in Canada, a country with some of the lowest average air pollution levels in the world.
  • Direct Biological Impact: The negative relationship between air quality and brain health persisted even after researchers adjusted for major cardiovascular risk factors like high blood pressure, diabetes, and body adiposity, suggesting pollution directly targets the central nervous system.
  • Gender-Specific Vulnerability: Higher exposure to traffic-related air pollution was linked to visible, structural signs of damage on brain MRI scans, a trend that was uniquely more pronounced in female participants.
  • Targeted Environmental Pollutants: The study tracked multi-year exposure to two common byproducts of vehicle exhaust, industrial emissions, and wildfire smoke: nitrogen dioxide and fine particulate matter.

Source: McMaster University

The air pollution we breathe daily could be harming more than just our lungs and hearts. New research from McMaster University suggests that fine particles from traffic, industry and wildfire smoke is linked to worse cognitive function.

The study,ย published online in the journalย Strokeย on May 13, 2026, found that people living in areas with higher air pollution scored worse on tests of memory, understanding and mental speed. This finding was true for places where air pollution is considered low by international standards.

Higher levels of traffic-related pollution were also linked to small but visible signs of damage to the brain seen on MRI scans, and more so in women.

These relationships remained even after accounting for heart-health risk factors like high blood pressure, diabetes, and body adiposity, suggesting that air pollution may be directly affecting the brain.

โ€œDementia doesnโ€™t happen overnight,โ€ saysย Russell de Souza, associate professor with McMasterโ€™s Department of Health Research Methods, Evidence, and Impact and the studyโ€™s corresponding author.

โ€œIt develops over decades. Identifying factors that may damage the brain early, and that are potentially preventable, is critical for protecting brain health later in life.โ€

While the study doesnโ€™t prove air pollution causes dementia, it does add to a growing body of evidence that air quality may impact age-related changes in memory or thinking.

Unlike many previous studies conducted in regions with heavy pollution, this research focused on Canada, a country with some of the lowest average air pollution levels in the world. Researchers studied nearly 7,000 middle-aged adults across five Canadian provinces to see if long-term exposure to common air pollutants was linked to how well people think and remember.

To do this, researchers compared peopleโ€™s exposure over several years with their performance on cognitive tests. They focused on two pollutants: fine particles in the air known as fine particulate matter or PM2.5 and nitrogen dioxide. Both are common byproducts of vehicle exhaust, with PM2.5 particles also common within fumes from wildfires and industry.

โ€œCanadaโ€™s air is often described as clean, but our findings suggest that even low levels of air pollution are linked to worse brain health,โ€ says lead authorย Sandi Azab, an assistant professor with McMasterโ€™s Department of Medicine.

โ€œThese are changes that can happen quietly, years before any noticeable symptoms appear.โ€

Researchers say longโ€‘term followโ€‘up studies are needed to better understand how ongoing exposure to air pollution may influence cognitive decline over time, and whether improving air quality can help protect brain health.

Funding: The research was conducted as part of the Canadian Alliance for Healthy Hearts and Minds (CAHHM) study and was supported by funding from the Canadian Partnership Against Cancer, the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada, and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research.

Key Questions Answered:

Q: If I live in a country with “clean air” like Canada, am I completely safe from pollution-related brain damage?

A: According to this study, no. The researchers discovered that even levels of air pollution considered exceptionally low by international standards are quietly linked to worse brain health. The damage happens subtly and incrementally over several years, long before any obvious clinical symptoms ever appear.

Q: Why does the study adjust for things like high blood pressure and diabetes?

A: Cardiovascular issues are already known to impair blood flow to the brain and cause cognitive decline. By statistically removing the influence of blood pressure, diabetes, and body fat, the McMaster team proved that air pollution isn’t just hurting the heart and lungs first, it appears to be directly damaging brain tissue independently.

Q: Does breathing in wildfire smoke or traffic exhaust mean I will get dementia?

A: The study does not definitively prove that air pollution causes dementia, but it provides powerful evidence that air quality directly accelerates age-related changes in memory and thinking. Because dementia develops over decades, identifying and minimizing exposure to these preventable environmental particles early in midlife is a critical step for protecting your brain later.

Editorial Notes:

  • This article was edited by a Neuroscience News editor.
  • Journal paper reviewed in full.
  • Additional context added by our staff.

About this pollution and neurology research news

Author:ย Adam Ward
Source:ย McMaster University
Contact:ย Adam Ward โ€“ McMaster University
Image:ย The image is credited to Neuroscience News

Original Research:ย Open access.
โ€œAssociation of Air Pollution With Brain Health: A Cross-Sectional Analysis in Adults Living in Canadaโ€ by Sandi M. Azab, Sonia S. Anand, Dany Doiron, Karleen M. Schulze, Jeffrey R. Brook, Michael Brauer, Dipika Desai, Matthias G. Friedrich, Shrikant I. Bangdiwala, Vikki Ho, Trevor J.B. Dummer, Paul Poirier, Jean-Claude Tardif, Koon K. Teo, Scott Lear, Perry Hystad, Salim Yusuf, Eric E. Smith, and Russell J. de Souza.ย Stroke
DOI:10.1161/STROKEAHA.125.054251


Abstract

Association of Air Pollution With Brain Health: A Cross-Sectional Analysis in Adults Living in Canada

BACKGROUND:

Air pollution is a risk factor for dementia, but its role in early cognitive dysfunction is not clear. We aimed to investigate the association of air pollution with cognitive function, and the role of cardiovascular risk factors and greenspace in this association.

METHODS:

The CAHHM (Canadian Alliance for Healthy Hearts and Minds Cohort Study) is a cohort of Canadian adults recruited between 2014 and 2018, for whom averages of exposures to NO2 and fine particulate matter were estimated for 5 years before recruitment. Outcomes included the Montrรฉal Cognitive Assessment and Digit Symbol Substitution Test for cognitive function, and magnetic resonance imagingโ€“measured covert vascular brain injury. Generalized linear mixed models assessed pollutant associations with outcomes in this cross-sectional analysis.

RESULTS:

A total of 6878 adults participated in the study, with a mean age of 57.6 years (SD=8.8), and 55.6% were women. Mean (SD; range) 5-year pollutant concentrations preceding enrollment for fine particulate matter were 6.9 ฮผg/m3ย (2.0 [1.8โ€“11.2]), and for NO2ย were 12.9 parts per billion (5.9 [0.9โ€“33.9]). In adjusted models, a 5 ฮผg/m3ย higher fine particulate matter concentration was associated with 0.44 points lower Montrรฉal Cognitive Assessment (95% CI, โˆ’0.62 to โˆ’0.25) and 1.31 points lower Digit Symbol Substitution Test (95% CI, โˆ’2.41 to โˆ’0.22) scores.

A 5 parts per billion higher NO2ย concentration was associated with 0.12 points lower Montrรฉal Cognitive Assessment (95% CI, โˆ’0.17 to โˆ’0.07) and 0.38 points lower Digit Symbol Substitution Test (95% CI, โˆ’0.70 to โˆ’0.05) scores. A 5 parts per billion higher NO2ย concentration was associated with higher odds of covert vascular brain injury (adjusted odds ratio, 1.08 [95% CI, 1.00โ€“1.17]). Cardiovascular risk factors and greenspace did not change these associations.

CONCLUSIONS:

Fine particulate matter and NO2 were associated with lower cognitive function scores in middle-aged adults living in Canada, independent of cardiovascular risk factors. Our results warrant longitudinal follow-up to study the impact of air pollution on cognitive decline.

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