Dozens of Chemicals Found in Most Americans' Bodies
The concentration is especially high in children, a national study says.
By Marla Cone, L.A. Times Staff Writer
In the largest study of chemical exposure ever conducted on human beings, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported Thursday that most American children and adults were carrying in their bodies dozens of pesticides and toxic compounds used in consumer products, many of them linked to potential health threats.
The report documented bigger doses in children than in adults of many chemicals, including some pyrethroids, which are in virtually every household pesticide, and phthalates, which are found in nail polish and other beauty products as well as in soft plastics.
The CDC's director, Dr. Julie L.
Gerberding, called the national exposure
report - the third in an assessment that
is released biennially - a breakthrough
that would help public health officials
home in on the most important compounds
to which Americans are routinely exposed.
The latest installment, which looked for
148 toxic compounds in the urine and
blood of about 2,400 people age 6 and
older in 2000 and 2001, is "the largest
and most comprehensive report of its kind
ever released anywhere by anyone,"
Gerberding said. Findings were broken
down by age group and race.
At Thursday's news conference, CDC officials emphasized the good news: Steep
declines were found in children's
exposure to lead and secondhand cigarette
smoke.
Lead levels in children have dropped
significantly over several years, which
Gerberding called an "astonishing public
health achievement" attributable largely
to its removal from gasoline and paint.
About 1.6% of young children tested from
1999 to 2002 had elevated levels of lead,
which could lower their intelligence and
damage their brains, compared with 8.2%
in the late 1970s and 4.4% in the early
1990s.
But the discovery of more than 100 other
substances in humans, particularly
children, distressed environmental health
experts.
The report in general shows that people -
kids and adults - are exposed to things
that aren't intended to be in their
body," said Dr. Jerome A. Paulson, an
associate professor of pediatrics at the
George Washington University School of
Medicine and Health Sciences who
specializes in children's environmental
health. "In and of itself, that is a
concern. Whether it's harmful or not we
can't tell from this particular study."
The new data in the 475-page report
reveal how "we have fouled our own nest,"
Paulson said. "We contaminated the
environment sufficiently that there are
measurable amounts of potentially toxic
substances in people - kids and adults."
The CDC did not try to gauge the health
threat the chemicals might pose. A
measurable amount of a compound in a
person's body does not mean it causes
disease or other damage, the agency
noted.
For many compounds in the report, experts
have little information on what amounts
may be harmful or what they may do in
combination.
We are really at the beginning of a very
complicated journey to understand the
thousands of substances we are exposed
to," said Thomas Burke, associate
professor at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg
School of Public Health.
The discovery of pyrethroids in most
people is especially important, as no one
had looked for them in the human body
before. Pyrethroids are synthetic
versions of natural compounds found in
flowers, and they have been considered
safer than older pesticides, such as DDT
and chlordane, that build up in the
environment and have been banned in the
United States.
But in high doses, pyrethroids are toxic
to the nervous system. They are the
second most common class of pesticides
that result in poisoning. At low doses,
they might alter hormones. The compounds
are used in large volumes in farm and
household pesticides and are sprayed by
public agencies to kill mosquitoes.
Pyrethroids "were a step forward [from
DDT and other banned pesticides], but now
we're beginning to understand that while
they don't persist in the environment,
many of us are exposed," Burke said. "We
don't quite know what those levels mean."
Eleven of 12 phthalates tested were
higher in children than adults. All of
the phthalates but one are used in
fragrances. In animal tests, and in one
recent study of human babies, some of the
compounds have been shown to alter male
reproductive organs or to feminize
hormones.
Representatives of the chemical and
pesticide industries praised the study,
saying that human biomonitoring is the
best available tool to measure exposure.
They echoed the CDC in saying that
discovery of the chemicals in the human
body did not automatically mean they
posed a threat.
The CDC's Gerberding said that "for the
vast majority" of the 148 chemicals in
the report, "we have no evidence of
health effects."
Many toxicologists and environmental
scientists disagree.
Studies of animals, and in some cases
people, suggest that most of the
compounds can affect the brain, hormones,
reproductive system or the immune system,
or that they are linked to cancer.
"These are some bad actors," Burke said.
Many of the compounds have not been
studied sufficiently to know what happens
with chronic exposure to low doses. "No
evidence of health effects does not imply
that they are not harmful," Paulson said.
"It just means we don't know one way or
another."
Environmental groups have called for U.S.
law to require chemical companies to test
industrial compounds more
comprehensively, a proposal similar to
one that the European Parliament is to
debate in the fall.
The evidence that many contaminants amass
in children more than in adults could
mean that they are exposed to larger
amounts - perhaps from crawling,
breathing more rapidly or putting items
in their mouths - or that their bodies
are less able to cope with or metabolize
them.
In the womb and in the first two years
after birth, children undergo
extraordinary cell growth, from brain
neurons to immune cells, so there are
more opportunities for toxic compounds to
disrupt the cells," Paulson said. Animal
tests show that fetuses and newborns are
the most susceptible to harm from many
chemicals.
In the CDC study, one of every 18 women
of childbearing age, or 5.7%, had mercury
that exceeded the level that the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency deemed
safe to a developing fetus.
Tests on school children show that
mercury exposure in the womb can lower
IQs, with memory and vocabulary
particularly impaired.
The CDC plans to expand the national
chemical report to more than 300
compounds in two years and about 500 in
four years. An estimated 80,000 chemicals
are in commercial use today.
The statements enclosed herein have not
been evaluated by the Food and Drug
Administration. The products mentioned on
this site are not intended to diagnose,
treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
Information and statements made are for
education purposes and are not intended
to replace the advice of your family
doctor.