Environmental Pollution and Cardiovascular Diseases
Environmental Pollution and Cardiovascular Diseases by Sultan Ayoub Meo is a compelling, evidence-driven exploration of how modern environmental hazards shape heart and vascular health worldwide. This authoritative volume connects cutting‑edge research with practical public health strategies, tracing how air pollution, water contamination, heavy metals, and noise exposure contribute to hypertension, ischemic heart disease, stroke, and arrhythmias in populations from urban centers to rural communities.
Clear, engaging chapters explain biological mechanisms—oxidative stress, inflammation, endothelial dysfunction—while summarizing epidemiological findings across regions including Asia, the Middle East, Europe, Africa, and the Americas. Clinicians, researchers, public health officials, and policy makers will find actionable insights on risk assessment, prevention, and community-level interventions that reduce cardiovascular burden in both developed and developing countries.
Readable yet scholarly, the book emphasizes real-world relevance: how city planning, emissions control, occupational safety, and individual lifestyle choices can lower population risk. Case studies and regional data make it particularly useful for professionals working in urban health, environmental medicine, and global health policy.
For anyone aiming to understand or combat the hidden cardiovascular costs of pollution—whether a cardiologist, environmental scientist, public health advocate, or concerned reader—this book is essential. Equip your library and your practice with a resource that translates science into policy and prevention. Order your copy of Environmental Pollution and Cardiovascular Diseases by Sultan Ayoub Meo today and join the effort to protect heart health across the globe.
Note: eBooks do not include supplementary materials such as CDs, access codes, etc.

