 As if U.S. troops serving in Iraq didn’t face enough risk to life and  limb already, these servicemen and women are putting their long-term  health at risk because the air in Iraq is so polluted.
As if U.S. troops serving in Iraq didn’t face enough risk to life and  limb already, these servicemen and women are putting their long-term  health at risk because the air in Iraq is so polluted.
 
 A study begun in 2008 is finding that much of the air pollution in Iraq  is of the most insidious sort – the very small dust particles that can  make their way deep into the lungs and stay there. The study’s  preliminary findings were presented late Wednesday at the National  Meeting of the American Chemical Society in Anaheim.
Bigger specks of dust – the ones we can actually see – get trapped by  cilia, tiny hairs in the nose and respiratory tract. But, says study  team member Jennifer Bell, a graduate student in atmospheric chemistry  at the University of Alaska in Fairbanks, much of the fine particulate  matter in Iraqi air is small enough to slip past.
 
 “When we take a breath, they travel into the deepest part of the lung  where oxygen exchange takes place,” Bell explained in a news release  from the American Chemical Society.
