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Does Air Duct Cleaning
Reduce Allergens in your Home?
You see them calling out to you from the Yellow Pages and
newspaper advertising...headlines promising to eliminate
allergy problems and remove dust allergens from
the home. Despite the claims and testimonials, until
recently no published scientific data supported these assertions.
Of course, one of the first-line therapies in the treatment
of allergies and asthma is avoidance of offending allergens.
Airborne allergens in the home constitute one of the hardest
types of allergens to avoid. Heating and air conditioning
systems have been established as harbors for molds, and certainly
sanitation of this system is of great interest
to allergic and asthmatic patients.
A test was conducted about the theory that commercial air-duct
sanitation is effective in reducing indoor allergen levels.
Eight residential heat-ventilation-air conditioning
(HVAC) systems in six homes during winter (heating mode),
and six HVAC systems in five homes during summer (cooling
mode), were sampled to measure fungal colony forming
units (CFUs).
he sampling was done before and after HVAC sanitation occurred.
Two homes in which no duct cleaning was done served as controls
in each phase of this study. The homes ranged in size from
1,500 sq. ft. up to 4,600 sq. ft., and well built of brick
or brick and wood frame construction. The study took place
in north Texas.
Sampling was performed using culture plates of malt extract,
which provides an excellent growth medium for fungal colonies.
The plates were placed directly in the air stream.
The baseline CFUs were found to be approximately equal in
the control and study homes. Eight weeks after the sanitation
procedure, the study houses exhibited a whopping 92% decrease
in CFUs during the winter, and an 84% reduction in the summer.
Over the same 8-week period, no reduction in CFUs was observed
in the control houses.
This indicates dramatically that air-duct cleaning by a qualified
commercial firm does indeed provide relief from airborne molds,
one of the most common aeroallergens. This benefit can be
extended by installing a high-efficiency intake filter following
such air duct cleaning.
Another interesting fact the researchers noted was that pre-cleaning
CFU levels were much higher in the summer than in the winter.
They speculate that this could be because in a cooling mode,
there is higher moisture content due to the evaporative coils.
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