Environmental determinants of cerebral haemorrhage in older adults: behavioural pathways and population health implications.
Qiang Ji, Yawei Hou
Abstract
Open AccessIntracerebral haemorrhage (ICH) is a rapidly fatal cerebrovascular catastrophe that claims a disproportionate share of stroke deaths among older adults despite decades of progress in acute care. Emerging research now implicates a constellation of non-biomedical contextual stressors ambient fine particulate matter, traffic-derived gases and noise, thermal volatility, and bio-accumulative heavy metals, themselves patterned by social determinants of health and political-commercial decision-making as pivotal but still under-recognised drivers of small-vessel rupture. This review synthesises epidemiological, behavioural and translational evidence to illuminate how pollutant-driven sympathetic arousal, sleep fragmentation, physical inactivity and impaired thermoregulation converge on age-accentuated endothelial fragility, thereby lowering the haemodynamic threshold for cerebral bleeding. We further map the geo-temporal and socio-spatial inequities in these exposures rooted in social, political and commercial determinants of health that tether disadvantaged communities to higher exposure loads and outline the corresponding gradients in ICH incidence, mortality and disability-adjusted life-years. We appraise the preventive leverage of integrated structural policies that decarbonise urban transport, regulate commercial determinants, dampen nocturnal noise, expand equitable green infrastructure and fortify climate resilience. By advancing a behavioural-environmental framework that links modifiable exposures to actionable pathways, this article furnishes clinicians, public-health practitioners and policymakers with a coherent agenda for mitigating the impending surge of environmentally mediated cerebral haemorrhage in ageing societies.