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Respiratory Environmental Health

The Respiratory Environmental Health team conducts research in early life determinants of lung growth and development, respiratory environmental health, and mechanisms of airway dysfunction in asthma and other respiratory disease.

These research themes underpin the team's overall goal to understand the factors that contribute to respiratory disease, and thus improve the respiratory health of children and their families.

The Developmental Origins of Health and Disease (DOHaD) concept describes how maternal and environmental factors interact during development to have long-term consequences on later health and disease. The main focus of DOHaD has been on how early-life nutritional insults manifest as chronic disease in adult life, however there is increasing evidence that in utero and early-life exposure to environmental insults, such as air pollution, tobacco smoke, pathogens and allergens is involved in the early programming of asthma and other respiratory diseases.

This evidence is based on epidemiological studies, but is confounded by the complex inter-related exposures that children experience during development. Because of this complexity, a significant knowledge gap exists around the mechanisms associated between environmental exposures and the development of respiratory disease and dysfunction. By understanding key lung development processes we aim to design interventions that will ultimately prevent the onset of respiratory disease and improve lung health in the community.

Facilitated through collaborations with researchers examining clinical outcomes, the team's approach to research is multi-disciplinary, with epidemiological and clinical studies informing the design of mechanistic pre-clinical studies. These are in turn used to identify issues that require further investigation in terms of clinical outcomes and public health.

Team leader

Honorary Research Fellow

Team members (4)

Natalie Johnson

Natalie Johnson

PhD Student

Ebony Quintrell

Ebony Quintrell

PhD student

Rachel Ong

Rachel Ong

Honours student

National E-cigarette Monitoring and Evidence Consortium: Supporting informed research, policy and practice in Australia

Comment on Karthikeyan et al. Concordance between In Vitro and In Vivo Relative Toxic Potencies of Diesel Exhaust Particles from Different Biodiesel Blends. Toxics 2024, 12, 290

In utero and early-life nitrate in drinking water impacts lung function of weanling rats

Consumption of nitrate in drinking water has previously been associated with a range of adverse health effects, including methemoglobinemia and potentially cancer. In animal models, it has been shown to impact respiratory structure and function, however, there is a paucity of data of the effects of in utero exposure on the respiratory health of offspring.

Prenatal Origins of Obstructive Airway Disease: Starting on the Wrong Trajectory?

From the results of well-performed population health studies, we now have excellent data demonstrating that deficits in adult lung function may be present early in life, possibly as a result of developmental disorders, incurring a lifelong risk of obstructive airway diseases such as asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. 

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