A: Because it goes without saying.
[....]
Q: Except for the Grotto Report? There is another source mentioned in your review that says that ambient air pollution causes oxidative stress?
A: Causes Radi to enter. The entry of pollutants into the human body and this causes, it goes indirectly. I don't have a direct sentence there that causes it, but it is indirectly.
Q: You don't have any source that says substances and ambient air pollution cause oxidative stress?
A: At the moment I don't remember, but it goes for granted. I don't. Not at all.
(pp. 107-108).
- The expert, Dr. Shlita, was asked and answered on the matter of "free radicals" as follows:
Q: Ok. Now agree with me that nowhere in your opinion, do you come and say To what extent a concentration of free radicals is it good and above it it starts to do damageRight?
A: True, no one knows it.
Q: No one knows that. Now Please confirm to me, if it is true, that there is also no standard of concentration of radicals that it is permissible to have in the body, that it is good to have in the body, there is no standard.
A: No standard, no standard. Yes. May I add something small here?
[....]
A: There is no standard for radicals, but you do have a standard for various chemical contaminants.
Q: We know that.
A: But the level of pollutants is addressed.
Q: We know that.
A: But there is a synergy between them.
Present: It is also written.
A: Therefore, when the concentration is much lower, it is already harmful.
[.....]
Q: Now if I understand you correctly, when you say that air pollution makes free radicals So in someone who has been exposed to air pollution, we will find more free radicals, higher concentrations of free radicals than in someone who has not been exposed to air pollution. Right?
A: This needs to be measured. I can't say that in advance.
Q: Has anyone measured it?
A: Of course. This, you measure it.