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http://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/26/opinion/sunday/kristof-big-chem-big-harm.html?_r=1&emc=eta1
NEW research is demonstrating that some common chemicals all around us may be even more harmful than previously thought. It seems that they may damage us in ways that are transmitted generation after generation, imperiling not only us but also our descendants.
Yet following the script of Big Tobacco a generation ago, Big Chem has,
so far, blocked any serious regulation of these endocrine disruptors, so
called because they play havoc with hormones in the body’s endocrine system.
One of the most common and alarming is bisphenol-A, better known as BPA.
The failure to regulate it means that it is unavoidable. BPA is found
in everything from plastics to canned food to A.T.M. receipts. More than
90 percent of Americans have it in their urine.
Even before the latest research showing multigeneration effects, studies
had linked BPA to breast cancer and diabetes, as well as to
hyperactivity, aggression and depression in children.
Maybe it seems surprising to read a newspaper column about chemical
safety because this isn’t an issue in the presidential campaign or even
firmly on the national agenda. It’s not the kind of thing that we in the
news media cover much.
Yet the evidence is growing that these are significant threats of a kind
that Washington continually fails to protect Americans from. The
challenge is that they involve complex science and considerable
uncertainty, and the chemical companies — like the tobacco companies
before them — create financial incentives to encourage politicians to
sit on the fence. So nothing happens.
Yet although industry has, so far, been able to block broad national
curbs on BPA, new findings on transgenerational effects may finally put a
dent in Big Chem’s lobbying efforts.
One good sign: In late July, a Senate committee, for the first, time passed the Safe Chemicals Act,
landmark legislation sponsored by Senator Frank Lautenberg, a New
Jersey Democrat, that would begin to regulate the safety of chemicals.
Evidence of transgenerational effects of endocrine disruptors has been
growing for a half-dozen years, but it mostly involved higher doses than
humans would typically encounter.
Now Endocrinology, a peer-reviewed journal, has published a study measuring the impact of low doses of BPA. The study is devastating for the chemical industry.
Pregnant mice were exposed to BPA at dosages analogous to those humans
typically receive. The offspring were less sociable than control mice
(using metrics often used to assess an aspect of autism in humans), and
various effects were also evident for the next three generations of
mice.
The BPA seemed to interfere with the way the animals processed hormones
like oxytocin and vasopressin, which affect trust and warm feelings. And
while mice are not humans, research on mouse behavior is a standard way
to evaluate new drugs or to measure the impact of chemicals.
“It’s scary,” said Jennifer T. Wolstenholme,
a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Virginia and the lead author
of the report. She said that the researchers found behaviors in
BPA-exposed mice and their descendants that may parallel autism spectrum
disorder or attention deficit disorder in humans.
Emilie Rissman, a co-author who is professor of biochemistry and
molecular genetics at University of Virginia Medical School, noted that
BPA doesn’t cause mutations in DNA. Rather, the impact is “epigenetic”
— one of the hot concepts in biology these days — meaning that changes
are transmitted not in DNA but by affecting the way genes are turned on
and off.
In effect, this is a bit like evolution through transmission of acquired
characteristics — the theory of Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, the 19th-century
scientist whom high school science classes make fun of as a foil to
Charles Darwin. In epigenetics, Lamarck lives.
“These results at low doses add profoundly to concerns about endocrine
disruptors,” said John Peterson Myers, chief scientist at Environmental
Health Sciences. “It’s going to be harder than just eliminating exposure
to one generation.”
The National Institutes of Health is
concerned enough that it expects to make transgenerational impacts of
endocrine disruptors a priority for research funding, according to a
spokeswoman, Robin Mackar.
Like a lot of Americans, I used to be skeptical of risks from chemicals
like endocrine disruptors that are all around us. What could be safer
than canned food? I figured that opposition came from tree-hugging
Luddites prone to conspiracy theories.
Yet, a few years ago, I began to read the peer-reviewed journal
articles, and it became obvious that the opposition to endocrine
disruptors is led by toxicologists, endocrinologists, urologists and
pediatricians. These are serious scientists, yet they don’t often have
the ear of politicians or journalists.
I’m hoping these new studies can help vault the issue onto the national
stage. Threats to us need to be addressed, even if they come not from
Iranian nuclear weapons, but from things as banal as canned soup and
A.T.M. receipts.
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