Canadian Wildfires Are Affecting Millions — How Exposure To Wildfire Smoke Affects Your Brain

Gabriel A. Silva
5 min readJul 5, 2023
JERSEY CITY, NJ — JUNE 7: Smoke continues to shroud the sun as it rises behind the skyline of lower Manhattan and One World Trade Center in New York City on June 7, 2023, as seen from Jersey City, New Jersey. (Photo by Gary Hershorn/Getty Images)

The National Weather Service issued warnings on Wednesday to over 80 million Americans across the Midwest, Northeast and Appalachian Mountains to limit or avoid outdoor physical activities and exposure amid renewed shifts in smoke patterns from the wildfires affecting Eastern Canada. Toronto registered the worst air quality of any major city in the world on Wednesday.

Canada is experiencing its most severe wildfire season on record, affecting tens of millions of people in both Canada and the United States. Beyond the obvious immediate dangers and concerns of individuals in the potential path of the fires themselves, the effects on health from exposure to wildfire smoke even at large distances is a growing concern around the world.

The risks and potential health consequences on the heart and lungs — particularly for at-risk individuals including children, older adults and those with medical conditions — are well known. But what about the effects of wildfire smoke on the brain and cognition? What are the consequences of acute exposure to potential long-term effects?

Wildfire smoke exposure even over just a few hours can have significant effects on the health of the brain and its physiology. It can also affect cognition, memory and mental health, including causing headaches and “brain fog.” One of the main culprits is particulate matter produced by inefficient burning that gets into the air and eventually into the body.

Despite the growing evidence that wildfire smoke particulate matter can have serious effects on the brain, there is no complete picture yet. There are only a handful of scientific studies specifically focusing on wildfire smoke exposure on the brain, but it will likely be an growing topic of research as the intensity and duration of wildfires continue to increase.

Why Wildfire Smoke Is So Hazardous

The chemical composition of wildfire smoke particulate matter is different than that of ambient particulate matter or particulates from other sources of pollution, such as car emissions or industrial pollution. Wildfire particulate matter has a higher proportion of carbon-based pollutants in a variety of chemical forms. The size of the particulate matter also impacts the effect it has on health. For example, different size particulates can lodge in the lungs differently and have different clinical effects. Wildfire particulate matter consists of a mix of sizes. The size of the particulate matter as well as the ecological source from which they’re derived — in other words, where the fire is burning — has an impact on the composition of the smoke, how it travels and the resultant health effects it produces.

From a cellular and physiological perspective, wildfire smoke is known to be toxic to cells, pro-inflammatory and capable of affecting how the immune system responds and functions to particulate matter exposure. Particulates within size ranges found in wildfire smoke is likely to reach the brain from inhalation via the lungs or the nose (olfactory).

If particulates enter the brain from the lungs, they need to first cross the blood-brain barrier. That’s a physical barrier formed by what are called tight junctions between the endothelial cells that form the capillaries that carry blood to the brain. Those endothelial cells act as gate-keepers that regulate what can and cannot cross from the systemic circulation and blood into the cerebrospinal fluid that bathes the brain and spinal cord. But the systemic inflammation that results from smoke exposure can increase the permeability — the “leakiness” — of the capillaries that feed the brain, thereby providing a pathway for particulate matter to cross and reach the brain. Inflammation can cause the tight junctions between endothelial cells to become compromised and more permeable, resulting in an unregulated flow of particulates across the barrier.

Wildfire smoke particulate matter could also access the brain more directly through the olfactory neurons in the nose. These neurons extend from the olfactory bulb, which is part of the brain itself, to the olfactory epithelium. As such, if particulate matter enter these neurons and travel to other parts of the brain there is no further need to cross the blood-brain barrier.

Wildfire’s Risks To Brain Health

Once in the brain, ambient particulate matter have been shown to produce oxidative toxicity that can lead to cell death in neurons and other non-neuronal cells, as well as inflammation. Similar cellular and physiological effects on brain health have been proposed for particulate matter produced by wildfires.

A recent study from 2020 quantified in detail a number of neuroinflammatory and neurometabolomic wildfire smoke inhalation effects in mice, by setting up a mobile lab over 180 miles from active wildfires in California, Arizona and Washington. Following a four-hour-per-day 20-day exposure, the scientists measured significant and persistent neuroinflammation even as peripheral immune activity in the lungs and bone marrow resolved itself. The researchers were able to show that particulate matter exposure from wildfires directly affected the function of endothelial cells — the cells that physically make up the walls of blood vessels — and the expression of a number of specific molecules in the blood and in the brain necessary for cells to interact with their local environments and other cells. They also saw an increase in the infiltration of peripheral immune cells from the blood across the blood-barrier into the brain.

In the brain itself, they measured an increase in the activation of neural glial cells, which have homeostatic roles that maintain a healthy environment for neurons to function, including molecular changes and activation of microglia, the brain’s resident immune cells.

Interestingly, the scientists also measured a decrease in molecules that normally protect the brain against aging, while simultaneously observing an increase in amyloid-beta protein, which is associated with neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer’s disease.

Another study documented a statistical connection between short-term acute exposure to wildfire smoke particulate matter with a quantified decrease in a cognitive task consisting of an attention-oriented brain-training game. Exposure to even just a few hours was correlated with decreased cognitive scores. Beyond wildfire smoke exposure, other work has documented the severe mental health effects experiencing a wildfire can have on anxiety, depression and traumatic stress.

Unknown still are the potential long-term effects of acute wildfire smoke exposure on the health of the brain and on cognition. And as wildfires continue getting bigger and hotter for longer and longer, the effects of the resultant smoke on the brain of affected individuals could conceivably increase in severity over the decades to come.

This article was originally published on Forbes.com. You can check out this and other pieces written by the author on Forbes here.

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Gabriel A. Silva

Professor of Bioengineering and Neurosciences, University of California San Diego