• Home
  • About Us
    • Member Directory
    • Contact Us
  • Blogs
    • Scientific Blogs
      • Technology
      • Environment
      • Health
    • Infinity Explorer
    • Traveler Book
    • Life Around
  • Publication
  • Scientific Advisory
  • Project
    • Future Projects
    • Ongoing Projects
    • Previous Projects
  • Services
    • Language Programs
    • Latest Software
    • Environmental Consultancy
    • Internship
    • Exercise
  • Career
    • Masters
    • PHDs
    • Postdoctorals
    • Travel Grants
    • Others

Green walls in offices have a positive impact on skin microbiota and enhance immune regulation

Green walls in offices have a positive impact on skin microbiota and enhance immune regulation

Share:

Twitter
Tweet
LinkedIn
Share
Facebook
fb-share-icon
WeChat
Follow by Email
Hardin Bitsky

Hardin Bitsky

Mr. Hardin, a future doctor of pharmacy, provides services as a content writer for scientific and technical niches.

An experimental study led by the Natural Resources Institute Finland (Luke) showed that air-circulating green walls installed inside offices modified microbiota affecting employees’ skin health and enhanced the immune system’s regulation. Effects could already be seen during one month.

It is estimated that one out of five people living in the developed countries suffers from autoimmune disorders, such as allergies, atopy, type 1 diabetes and inflammatory bowel diseases. The resulting costs for society are estimated at more than a hundred billion euros per year.

A recent study shows that green walls installed inside offices diversify employees’ skin microbiota that offer protection against autoimmune disorders. “Based on our results, green walls offer ideal solutions in workplaces and other indoor areas to balance people’s regular microbiota. Even though it is often necessary to medically treat autoimmune disorders, it would be important to enhance the prevention of these disorders and alleviate symptoms through contact with nature. This is the first study in which the addition of plants indoors is shown to be linked not only to microbiota, but also to immune regulation,” says Laura Soininen, a doctoral researcher at the University of Helsinki, commenting on the study published in Scientific Reports.

Green walls supporting health

In the study, volunteering employees were randomly divided into two groups, one of which received a water-circulating green wall in their rooms and the other acted as a control group without any green wall installed. The green walls were installed in conventional office buildings and a hospital area. The green walls were built by Finnish Naava Group Oy and included heartleaf philodendron (Philodendron scandens), dragon tree (Dracaena sp.) and bird’s nest fern (Asplenium antiquum).

Already in two weeks, an increase in the relative abundance of lactobacilli was identified on the skin of the employees whose offices had green walls installed. In previous studies, skin lactobacilli have been found to prevent pathogens and skin infections. During a month, an increase in the diversity of gammaproteobacteria was identified in employees working in offices with green walls installed compared with the control group. Diverse gammaproteobacteria on skin were linked to a decrease in the concentration of IL-17A cytokine that contributes to inflammations. In Luke’s previous greening study concerning outdoor areas of day-care centers, gammaproteobacteria were linked to effective immune regulation in children.

In the study, the level of TGF-β1 cytokine, linked to effective immune regulation, increased in the blood of those who worked in rooms with green walls installed during a month compared with the control group. Changes in blood cytokine concentrations were identified in the employees who worked in the office buildings participating in the study.

Solutions are needed to maintain contact with nature

Nature’s diverse microbes help the immune system develop and operate normally. In urban societies, people are less in contact with nature, which is why we need innovative nature-based solutions to maintain nature contact and reduce autoimmune disorders. “The results indicate that we can support people’s health with relatively easy nature-based solutions. However, urban societies need, in addition to these types of solutions, broader societal changes to maintain and increase healthy and useful contact with nature,” says Marja Roslund, research scientist at Luke. “These results encourage us to investigate this further.”

Related article:

Quantum mechanics could explain why DNA can spontaneously mutate

In-house pharmacists essential for aged care

PrevPreviousNew insights on the importance of skull channels for brain health
NextWhy is the 100-year-old BCG vaccine so broadly protective in newborns?Next

LATEST Blogs

Breakfast and health problems

Skipping Breakfast May Increase a Child’s Risk of Psychosocial Health Problems

September 7, 2022
James webb telescope

NASA’s Webb Space Telescope Captures a Cosmic Tarantula

September 7, 2022

Worse Than Smoking – Bad Sleep Can Worsen Lung Disease

August 31, 2022
Nanotechnology

Dr. Muhammad Adeel Addressed the International Con-ference as keynote speaker

August 23, 2022
Benefits of Mushrooms

Top 10 Health Benefits of Mushrooms, the Ultimate Superfood

August 18, 2022

New Way Invented To Produce Oxygen on Mars for Future Explorers

August 18, 2022

Evidence of Unprecedented Modern Sea-Level Rise Found in Ancient Caves

August 18, 2022

Research Shows Salt Substitutes Lower Risk of Heart Attack/Stroke and Death

August 13, 2022
covid symptoms

Hair Loss and Sexual Dysfunction Join Fatigue and Brain Fog in List of Long COVID Symptoms

August 13, 2022
protein

Most People Are Eating Too Much Protein – And It Has Serious Consequences

August 13, 2022

Categories

  • Scientific Blogs
  • Infinity Explorer
  • Traveler Book
  • Life Around

If you have tried to make a difference and you believe you deserve to be acknowledge, then please submit your story to us

Subscribe

Virtual Green Innovation Hub (VGI-H) is an emerging platform for young researchers which works as a bridge between You and the society.

Useful Links

Home
About us
Blogs

Subscribe Now

Don’t miss our future updates! Get Subscribed Today!

Copyright ©2022 Virtual Green Innovation Hub. All Rights Reserved.

Don’t miss our future updates. Get Subscribed Today!