Medify Air Blog

Indoor Air Pollution Damages Your Skin: Here's How

Written by Skylar Morris | Jan 18, 2024 10:01:22 AM

While it's common knowledge that exposure to air pollutants can lead to skin damage, there's a misconception that air pollution only occurs in outdoor environments. Surprisingly, indoor air pollutants pose a significant threat and contribute to skin damage.

As we fill our homes with convenient appliances and functional devices to simplify our lives and conserve energy, we inadvertently expose ourselves to indoor air pollutants released through a process known as 'off-gassing.'

Adding to the concern is the fact that many households lack a home air purifier, a device designed to filter pollutants and improve air quality. Let's explore how prolonged exposure to indoor air pollutants can gradually harm your skin over time.

Dust

People don’t think much about dust. But dust from silica, wood, flour grains, and asbestos can result in Dermatitis and skin irritation.

Biological Contaminants

Biological contaminants include dead cells, viruses, insects, mildew, bacteria, mold, and pet dander. These can cause skin irritation, inflammation, dehydration, itching, and other skin problems.

Particulate Matter (PM)

Stoves burning wood, coal and wood fires, and other alternative heating sources release particulate matter. This matter can cause skin dehydration and irritation. It can cause hypersensitivity and increased lines.

Second-hand smoke or tobacco smoke

Second-hand smoke or tobacco smoke leads to skin aging, deterioration, inflammation, discoloration, wrinkles, fine lines, and increased sensitivity. 80% of second-hand smoke is invisible to the naked eye. It can linger for up to three hours, enough for second-hand smoke to affect your skin.

Pesticides

You might be using weed killers in your indoor garden. It can result in a low level of pesticides in your indoor air. These pesticides can linger in the indoor air if you don’t have the best room air purifier. It can penetrate the skin and change the DNA structure. Pesticides can cause mutation, resulting in early skin damage, irritation, discoloration, inflammation, etc.

Nitrogen oxides

The use of stoves and ovens in our homes is prevalent. However, incomplete fuel or coal burn produces nitrogen oxides, which cause oversensitivity and skin irritation.

Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs)

Carbon forms volatile organic compounds (VOCs) when it vaporizes at room temperature. The indoors contain 10x more VOCs compared to the outdoors. Prolonged exposure to VOCs causes eczema, atopic dermatitis, pigmentation, and skin aging.

Formaldehyde

Curtains, carpets, flooring, and upholstery produce formaldehyde. In fact, humans also release formaldehyde in small amounts. However, higher exposure to formaldehyde can cause skin damage, irritation, and inflammation. It can also cause surface burning and allergic dermatitis.

Bottom Line

The sources of indoor pollution are higher in our houses than outdoor pollution. Prolonged exposure to indoor air pollutants can cause severe skin damage, resulting in premature aging, dermatitis, and more skin conditions.

Installing an air purifier with HEPA air filters from our wide range at Medify Air is a way to get rid of these indoor air pollutants. We introduce you to the most advanced range of air purifiers for residential, commercial, and industrial spaces.

Contact us now to know more.