Showing posts with label Individual Chemicals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Individual Chemicals. Show all posts

Friday, June 15, 2012

Danger, Warning, Caution

DANGER means that the chemical is harmful or fatal if swallowed. Ingestion of a small taste to a teaspoon could kill an average sized adult. .
WARNING means that the chemical is harmful if swallowed. Ingestion of a teaspoon to an ounce could kill an average sized adult.
CAUTION means that the chemical is harmful if swallowed. Ingestion of an ounce to a pint could kill an average adult.

_______________________________________________________________________________________
Unintentional Poisonings
The Statistics:
 On average, U.S. poison centers handle one poison exposure every 13 seconds.
 Generic substances (not all inclusive) involved in pediatric (under age of 6) exposures were:
Adhesives/glues, Arts/crafts/office supplies, Batteries, Chemicals, Cleaning substances, Cosmetics & personal care, Deodorizers, Dyes, Fertilizers, Paints & stripping agents, Pesticides, Pharmaceuticals/vitamins, Plants, Polishes & waxes, and Tobacco products.

Ingestion was the pathway of poisoning in 76.9% of the cases, followed by dermal (skin) (7.5%), inhalation (breathing) (5.8%), and ocular (eye) (5.2%).
_______________________________________________________________________________________

Statistics source: Watson W.A., Litovitz, T.L., Klein-Schwartz W., et al, 2003 Annual Report of the American Association of Poison Control Centers Toxic Exposure Surveillance System. Am J Emerg Med 2004; 22:335-404.

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Environmental Toxins - Mount Sinai CEHC (list w/ links)

Environmental Toxins

Today, children are exposed to thousands of substances in the environment, most of which have never been tested for toxicity to children. Lead is perhaps the best-studied of the environmental threats to children, but there may be countless more that have never been studied. There is strong and growing evidence that exposure to toxic chemicals in the environment contributes to many diseases of children, among them asthma, learning disabilities, certain birth defects and childhood cancer.
  • More than 80,000 new chemical compounds have been developed since World War II
  • Of these, 3,000 are high-volume chemicals, with annual production exceeding one million pounds. These chemicals are used extensively in our homes, schools, communities, and they are widely dispersed in air, water, soil, and waste sites.
  • Fewer than 20% of these high volume chemicals have been tested for their possible toxicity to children.
  • Over 2.5 billion pounds of toxic chemicals are released to the environment in the US each year.
  • Nearly 75% of the top 20 chemicals discharged to the environment are known or suspected to be toxic to the developing human brain. In addition, more than 4 billion pounds of pesticides - many of them neurotoxic - are applied in the US each year in agriculture, on lawns and gardens, and inside homes, schools, day-care centers and hospitals.
  • National surveys conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show measurable levels of high-volume synthetic chemicals in the bodies of nearly all Americans, including newborns, infants and in the breast milk of nursing mothers.
References:
United States Environmental Protection Agency. Chemical Hazard Data Availability Study:  What Do We Really Know About the Safety of High Production Volume Chemicals? Washington, DC: Office of Pollution Prevention and Toxics, 1998.
United States Environmental Protection Agency.  Toxic Release Inventory (TRI) Program. Washington, DC, February 21, 2008.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).  Third National Report on Human Exposure to Environmental Chemicals. Atlanta (GA): CDC, 2005.

A:
B:
C:
D:
E:
F:
G:
L:
M:
N:
O:
P:
R:
S:
T:
V:
W:
SOURCE: http://www.mountsinai.org/patient-care/service-areas/children/areas-of-care/childrens-environmental-health-center/environmental-toxins


Additional Resources

Friday, July 2, 2010

Toxic Brew

This is a serious, life threatening problem. Fortunately there is a simple solution to protect you and those you love.



Could your home be healthier?
Learn how to get rid of toxins. . . it is worth it. 

This video clip is from a news program (CBC) in Canada.  The United States of America's Code of Federal Regulations is like Canada's in that; if a product is used for personal, family or household use.... the manufacturer does not have to tell us what is in it" (Section 1910.1200C, Title 29, Section 1500.82 2Q1A)

Link back to SOURCE:
http://video.aol.ca/video-detail/cbc-marketplace-report-toxic-brew/966454477/?icid=VIDLRVENT08
(you may need to scroll down)

Friday, May 21, 2010

Childhood Asthma and How to Combat It

Childhood asthma is a debilitating disease that affects the lungs of young children and can last throughout adulthood.  Childhood asthma can be terrifying; it is also on the rise.

Childhood asthma is now the most common condition in the developed world, and things aren’t getting any better.

The problem is that the lungs are very sensitive organs that eagerly absorb inhaled air to pick up all the oxygen that they can. In the process, lungs also absorb any particles in the air straight into their tissues. You may not be surprised to learn that the air indoors is filled with all kinds of particles that can cause damage to the lung tissue.
High on the list are particles produced from (1)paint and (2)outgassing.
*VOCs and other fume particles are clearly bad news, causing a variety of illnesses throughout the body, but when a baby is raised in a home where there’s a lot of VOCs, its lungs can become permanently weakened.
 VOCs and other fume particles can come from paint, home cleaning products, laundry detergents, fabric softeners, bleach and ammonia (to name a few things).

You may have never heard of outgassing.  Here is some more detail . . . .  one way it happens is when particle board is used to build houses. They release particles (called" exhaling") from inside its fibers into the air. Unfortunately, particle board is put together with truly nasty chemicals like formaldehyde, which have been proven to cause lung damage when they are inhaled.

And before you start blaming these construction chemicals for all the asthma in the world, take a good look at the studies done in Australia and Europe that link childhood asthma to common household cleaners, especially bleach. Window cleaners, air fresheners, and disinfectants were also pinpointed.

If you are worried about your child developing an asthma condition or if they already have asthma you may feel a bit panicky. That is understandable and may be your call to action!

Fortunately there are things you can do to make your home safer and hopefully asthma-free.

First, be extra careful of what chemical cleaners, personal care products and cosmetics you use. When in doubt, always look at the labels. If there’s a warning sign, it’s there for a reason. Stay away from bleach and try using eco-friendly products, stain-fighting enzymes, and ionized water when possible.

Second, use green construction materials wherever possible. VOC-free paints and varnishes are a must. To get rid of the out-gassing effect, try using green particle board instead. This board uses recycled lumber materials and natural resins instead of formaldehyde and other nasty chemicals.

*VOCs  = Volatile Organic Compounds 
For more info on how to go greener and cleaner go here and then after you peruse the info . . . click on "request information" near the top. 

Friday, August 3, 2007

Hazardous Chemicals in Supermarket Products

We all need healthier choices if we are to create better, safer, healthier lives for our families. This is why:
AIR FRESHENERS: Most air fresheners interfere with your ability to smell by coating your nasal passages with an oil film, or by releasing a nerve deadening agent. Known toxic chemicals found in an air freshener:
Formaldehyde: Highly toxic, known carcinogen.
Phenol: When phenol touches your skin it can cause it to swell, burn, peel, and break out in hives. Can cause cold sweats, convulsions, circulatory collapse, coma and even death.

AMMONIA: It is a very volatile chemical, it is very damaging to your eyes, respiratory tract and skin.

ANTIBACTERIAL CLEANERS: may contain: Triclosan: Absorption through the skin can be tied to liver damage.

BLEACH: It is a strong corrosive. It will irritate or burn the skin, eyes and respiratory tract. It may cause pulmonary edema or vomiting and coma if ingested. WARNING: never mix bleach with ammonia it may cause fumes which can be DEADLY.

CAR WASH AND POLISH: Petroleum Distillates: Associated with skin and lung cancer, irritant to skin, eyes, nose and lungs. Entry into the lungs may cause fatal pulmonary edema, most marked Danger, Harmful or Fatal.

CARPET AND UPHOLSTERY SHAMPOO: Most formulas are designed to over power the stain itself, they accomplish the task but not without using highly toxic substances.
Some include:
Perchlorethylene: Known carcinogen damages liver, kidney and nervous system damage. Ammonium Hydroxide: Corrosive, extremely irritable to eyes, skin & respiratory passages.

DISHWASHER DETERGENTS: Most products contain chlorine in a dry form that is highly concentrated. # 1 cause of child poisonings, according to poison control centers.

DRAIN CLEANER: Most drain cleaners contain lye, hydrochloric acid or trichloroethane.
Lye: Caustic, burns skin and eyes, if ingested will damage esophagus and stomach.
Hydrochloric acid: Corrosive, eye and skin irritant, damages kidneys, liver and digestive tract.
Trichloroethane: Eye and skin irritant, nervous system depressant; damages liver and kidneys.


FLEA POWDERS:
Carbaryl: Very toxic, causes skin, respiratory and cardiovascular system damage. Chlordane: Accumulates in the food chain, may damage eyes, lungs, liver, kidney and skin. Dichlorophene: Skin irritation: May damage liver, kidney, spleen and central nervous system. Maldison or Malathion (OP) inhibits the enzyme acetylcholinesterase, causes brain disorders, insomnia, anorexia, dermatitis, heart, lung, muscle, kidney, and liver damage.

FRAGRANCES: 95 percent of chemicals used in fragrances are synthetic compounds derived from petroleum. They include benzene derivatives, aldehydes, and other known toxics and sensitizers -- capable of causing cancer, birth defects, central nervous system disorders and allergic reactions. See
Fragranced Products Information Network (Betty Bridges), and The Environmenta l Health Network

FURNITURE POLISH:
Petroleum Distillates: Highly flammable, can cause skin and lung cancer.
Phenol: (see Air fresheners, Phenol.)
Nitrobenzene: Easily absorbed through the skin, extremely toxic.

LICE SHAMPOO: Especially vulnerable are children.
Maldison or Malathion (OP): inhibits the enzyme acetylcholinesterase, causes brain disorders, insomnia, anorexia, dermatitis, heart, lung, muscle, kidney, and liver damage. Piperonyl Butoxide benzodioxole: Inhibits microsomal enzymes, suspected of causing anorexia, carcinogenisis, coma, convulsions, dermal irritation, kidney and liver damage, hyperexcitability, prenatal damage, prostration, tearing, unsteadiness, vomiting and weight loss. Lindane: Inhalation, ingestion, or ABSORPTION through the SKIN causes vomiting, diarrhea, convulsions and circulatory collapse. May cause liver damage, stillbirths, birth defects and cancer.

LAUNDRY ROOM PRODUCTS:
Sodium or calcium hypocrite: Highly corrosive, irritates or burns skin, eyes or respiratory tract.
Linear alkylate sulfonate: Absorbed through the skin. Known liver damaging agent. Sodium Tripolyphosphate: Irritates skin and mucous membranes, causes vomiting. Easily absorbed through the skin from clothes.

MOLD AND MILDEW CLEANERS: Chemicals contained are:
Sodium hypochlorite: Corrosive, irritates or burns skin and eyes, causes fluid in the lungs which can lead to coma or death.
Formaldehyde: Highly toxic, known carcinogen. Irritant to eyes, nose, throat, and skin. May cause nausea, headaches, nosebleeds, dizziness, memory loss and shortness of breath.

OVEN CLEANER: Sodium Hydroxide (Lye): Caustic, strong irritant, burns to both skin and eyes. Inhibits reflexes, will cause severe tissue damage if swallowed.

PESTICIDES: Most pesticides have ingredients that affect the nervous system of insects. Dimpylate: Better known as Diazinon, extremely toxic. Impairs the central nervous system. Chlorinate Hydrocarbons: Suspected carcinogen and mutantagen. Accumulates in food and in fatty tissue. Will attack the nervous system.
Organophosphates such as Chlorpyrifos: a potent nerve poison, affects the nervous system.
Synthetic Pyrethrins and Pyrethroids, such as Permethrin: associated with children's brain cancers. Toxic and poisonous. If you can smell it, your lungs are absorbing it.

SPRAY & WIPE SURFACE CLEANERS: Many surface cleaners contain
the solvent
2-butoxyethanol, which may cause respiratory tract irritation, unconsciousness, kidney and liver damage, eye irritation, damage to blood cells, and blood in urine.

TAR AND BUG REMOVER: Contains
XYLENE and PETROLEUM DISTILLATES.

TOILET BOWL CLEANERS: Hydrochloric acid: Highly corrosive, irritant to both skin and eyes. Damages kidneys and liver. Hypochlorite Bleach: Corrosive, irritates or burns eyes, skin and respiratory tract. May cause pulmonary edema, vomiting or coma if ingested. Contact with other chemicals may cause chlorine fumes which may be fatal.

source:
http://www.netspeed.com.au/rdi/cas/products.htm

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

Contracepting the Environment

When EPA-funded scientists at the University of Colorado studied fish in a pristine mountain stream known as Boulder Creek two years ago, they were shocked. Randomly netting 123 trout and other fish downstream from the city’s sewer plant, they found that 101 were female, 12 were male, and 10 were strange “intersex” fish with male and female features.

It’s “the first thing that I’ve seen as a scientist that really scared me,” said then 59-year-old University of Colorado biologist John Woodling, speaking to the Denver Post in 2005.

They studied the fish and decided the main culprits were estrogens and other steroid hormones from birth control pills and patches, excreted in urine into the city’s sewage system and then into the creek.

Read the full article at The NC Register (Boulder, Colorado)
Source:
1. article by BY WAYNE LAUGESEN; NC REGISTER CORRESPONDENT from the July 15-21, 2007 Issue
2. click on the graphic for more info on How Modern Chemicals May Be Changing Human Biology (Male infertility on the rise and excessive environmental estrogens leading to breast cancer)

Sunday, July 1, 2007

Sexy For Her; Poisonous For Baby (& Her)

Your perfume, shower gel or deodorant could contain chemicals that disrupt hormones, affect immune or nervous systems, or trigger cancer, allergies or other health problems. And not only that, but the chemicals we wash down the drain in our daily ablutions pollute the environment and harm wildlife.

Such is the grim news from the Women’s Environmental Network who have just launched a campaign to end the cosmetics cover up. The campaign aims to empower women to take action and lobby for safer cosmetics and toiletries.

The concern is that women are being exposed to tiny doses of chemicals that can build up in the body. The long-term effects of such exposure are unknown. Chemicals to watch out for include:

Phthalates – found in hair sprays, perfume, nail polishes and some plastics
Parabens – used as preservatives in moisturisers and deodorants
Triclosan – an antibacterial used in deodorants, toothpaste and liquid soaps
Toluene – used in lacquers and nail varnish

Research published a couple of years ago in the USA found that people were being exposed to much higher levels of phthalates than anticipated. Cosmetics were thought to be the missing source. Phthalates have oestrogenic properties and, at high doses, damage male reproductive tissues and cause deformities in developing embryos. Recent research in the USA found phthalates in 52 of the 72 beauty products tested, including all 17 of the perfumes.

Meanwhile another US report looks at the cumulative exposure to phthalates from cosmetics, breast milk, soft PVC toys and even in indoor air because of leaching from PVC products. One source highlighted was PVC medical equipment – tubes, IV bags and blood bags. Many of these products are used in the care of premature babies and so deliver a phthalate dose at the most vulnerable stage of development. The report calls for a phase out of the production and use of phthalates. The EU is trying to get the most toxic phthalate, DEHP, restricted but the chemical industry is delaying them.

Contact WEN for how to get involved in the Cosmetics Cover Up campaign by ringing 020 7481 9004 or visit http://www.wen.org.uk/Contact Health Care Without Harm at http://www.noharm.org/ or ring 01759 368286 for more details about the US research. http://www.ethicalconsumer.org/magazine/news/newsarchive.htm

Thursday, June 21, 2007

Dioxin

Second generation effects of the dioxin based weapons used by the US Army in Vietnam (the deformed are the children of the men originally exposed) .

An international conference in Japan said: "Dioxin is the most dangerous chemical ever developed by man. Doses capable of killing human beings and animals vary from entity to entity, but always in the range of 1 to 5 micrograms per kilogram of body weight. Prolonged effects may include symptoms of birth problems, cancer ..."
The post is called: I have never...
It is dated: Thursday, January 19, 2006

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Q –15

There is a very common chemical (1 among many chemicals) that is routinely used by traditional manufacturers …… especially in their personal care products. It’s called Q –15 (or quaternium 15).
It is a formaldehyde-releasing agent.
Formaldehyde is a known carcinogen and neurotoxin. On the low-end it causes skin irritation, headaches and migraines and on the high end: cancer.
Many products contain it because it is a cheap preservative.

It’s even in Johnson and Johnson Baby products including their baby wash. (Dove soaps, Crest Toothpastes)
There are over 28 other names for this one chemical making it hard to identify on labels. IF it is even listed on the label!
You see, there is a loophole in The United States of America’s Federal Code of Regulations --- it actually exempts manufacturers from full labeling of products if used for personal, family or household care
–Section 1910.1200C, Title 29, Section 1500.82 2Q1A

You have to stop and consider that if products are on store shelves they most likely do contain chemicals to sustain a loooong, loooong shelf life.
If it is not coming fresh to you, from where it is made …. You can probably count on it.

Need more info to get on a healthier road? More info is actually just a click away.

Sunday, June 17, 2007

In Harm's Way: Toxic Threats to Child Development

This report examines the contribution of toxic chemicals to neurodevelop-mental, learning, and behavioral disabilities in children. These disabilities are clearly the result of complex interactions among genetic, environmental and social factors that impact children during vulnerable periods of development. Toxic exposures deserve special scrutiny because they are preventable causes of harm.

1. An epidemic of developmental, learning, and behavioral disabilities has become evident among children.
It is estimated that nearly 12 million children (17%) in the United States under age 18 suffer from one or more learning, developmental, or behavioral disabilities.
Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), according to conservative estimates, affects 3 to 6% of all school children, though recent evidence suggests the prevalence may be as high as 17%. The number of children taking the drug Ritalin for this disorder has roughly doubled every 4-7 years since 1971 to reach its current estimate of about 1.5 million.
Learning disabilities alone may affect approximately 5-10% of children in public schools.
The number of children in special education programs classified with learning disabilities increased 191% from 1977-1994.
Approximately 1% of all children are mentally retarded.
The incidence of autism may be as high as 2 per 1000 children. One study of autism prevalence between 1966 and 1997 showed a doubling of rates over that time frame. Within the state of California, the number of children entered into the autism registry increased by 210% between 1987 and 1998. These trends may reflect true increases, improved detection, reporting or record keeping, or some combination of these factors. Whether new or newly recognized, these statistics suggest a problem of epidemic proportion.

2. Animal and human studies demonstrate that a variety of chemicals commonly encountered in industry and the home can contribute to developmental, learning, and behavioral disabilities.
Developmental neurotoxicants are chemicals that are toxic to the developing brain. They include the metals lead, mercury, cadmium, and manganese; nicotine; pesticides such as organophosphates and others that are widely used in homes and schools; dioxin and PCBs that bioaccumu-late in the food chain; and solvents, including ethanol and others used in paints, glues and cleaning solutions. These chemicals may be directly toxic to cells or interfere with hormones (endocrine disruptors), neurotransmitters, or other growth factors.
Lead
Increases in blood lead levels during infancy and childhood are associated with attention deficits, increased impulsiveness, reduced school performance, aggression, and delinquent behavior.
Effects on learning are seen at blood lead levels below those currently considered "safe."
Mercury
Large fetal exposures to methylmercury cause mental retardation, gait and visual disturbances.
Smaller fetal exposures, such as those resulting from regular maternal fish consumption, have been implicated in language, attention, and memory impairments that appear to be permanent.
Manganese
Unlike many other metals, some manganese is essential as a catalyst in several critically important enzymatic processes. However, several studies report a relationship between excessive childhood levels of manganese exposure and hyperactivity or learning disabilities.
Nicotine
Children born to women who smoke during pregnancy are at risk for IQ deficits, learning disorders, and attention deficits.
Children born to women who are passively exposed to cigarette smoke are also at risk for impaired speech, language skills, and intelligence.
Dioxins and PCBs
Monkeys exposed to dioxin as fetuses show evidence of learning disabilities.
Humans and animals exposed to low levels of PCBs as fetuses have learning disabilities.
Children exposed to PCBs during fetal life show IQ deficits, hyperactivity, and attention deficits when tested years later.
Pesticides
Animal tests of pesticides belonging to the commonly-used organophosphate class of chemicals show that small single doses on a critical day of development can cause hyperactivity and permanent changes in neurotransmitter receptor levels in the brain.
One of the most commonly used organophosphates, chlorpyrifos (Dursban), decreases DNA synthesis in the developing brain, resulting in deficits in cell numbers.
Some pyrethroids, another commonly used class of pesticides, also cause permanent hyperactivity in animals exposed to small doses on a single critical day of development.
Children exposed to a variety of pesticides in an agricultural community in Mexico show impaired stamina, coordination, memory, and capacity to represent familiar subjects in drawings.

Solvents
Exposure to organic solvents during development may cause a spectrum of disorders including structural birth defects, hyperactivity, attention deficits, reduced IQ, learning and memory deficiencies.
As little as one alcoholic drink a day by a mother during pregnancy may cause her offspring to exhibit impulsive behavior and lasting deficits in memory, IQ, school performance, and social adaptability.
Animal and limited human studies show that exposures to common chemicals like toluene, trichloroethylene, xylene, and styrene during pregnancy can also cause learning deficiencies and altered behavior in offspring, particularly after fairly large exposures.

3. A deluge of highly technical information has created communication gaps within the field of child development.
The recent explosion of research in the many sciences related to child development has produced a glut of highly technical information not readily understood by those outside the field in which the research was performed.
A communication gap has resulted, dividing fields of research and separating the domains of research, clinical practice, and the public.
Behavior and cognition can be described using clinical disorders, such as ADHD or Asperger's syndrome, which are categorical and qualitative. Alternatively, behavior and cognition can be described using abilities/traits, such as attention and memory, which are continuous and quantitative. Abilities/traits cluster into disorders in various ways and are emerging as an important bridge among the scientific disciplines focusing on child development.

4. Although genetic factors are important, they should not be viewed in isolation.
Certain genes may be susceptible to or cause individuals to be more susceptible to environmental "triggers." Particular vulnerability to a chemical exposure may be the result of a single or multiple interacting genes.

For example:
Gene-coding for certain enzymes can influence how chemicals are metabolized or stored in the body, or increase a person's susceptibility to a chemical. For example, a gene coding for the enzyme, delta aminolevulinic acid dehydratase (ALA-D), can influence lead metabolism, bone storage of lead, and blood lead levels.
Two genes increase susceptibility to organophosphate pesticides. One, carried by 4% of the population, results in lower levels of acetylcholinesterase, the target enzyme of organophosphates. The other, carried by 30-40% of the population, results in reductions in paroxonase, an enzyme that plays an important role in breaking down organophosphate pesticides.
Antibody reactions to infections is another important gene-environment interaction. For example, studies suggest that "PANDAS" (pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorders associated with streptococcal infection), that may affect patients with obsessive compulsive disorder, Tourette's syndrome and tics, result from streptococcal antibodies that cross react with critical brain structures in genetically susceptible children.

5. Neurotoxicants are not merely a potential threat to children. In some instances, adverse impacts are seen at current exposure levels.
According to EPA estimates, about 1.16 million women in the U.S. of childbearing years eat sufficient amounts of mercury-contaminated fish to risk damaging brain development of their children.
Breast-fed infants are exposed to levels of dioxin that exceed adult exposures by as much as a factor of 50. Dioxin exposures of this magnitude have been shown to cause abnormal social behavior in monkeys exposed before birth through the maternal diet. (While breast milk contaminants may compromise some of the cognitive benefits of breast feeding, breast milk remains strongly preferred over infant formula due to numerous important benefits to infant health.)
Prenatal exposure to PCBs at ambient environmental levels adversely affects brain development, causing attention and IQ deficits, which remain detectable years later and may be permanent.
Neurotoxicants that appear to have trivial effects on an individual have profound impacts when applied across populations. For example, a loss of 5 points in IQ is of minimal significance in a person with an average IQ. However a shift of 5 IQ points in the average IQ of a population of 260 million increases the number of functionally disabled by over 50% (from 6 to 9.4 million), and decreases the number of gifted by over 50% (from 6 to 2.6 million).

6. Vast quantities of neurotoxic chemicals are released into the environment each year.
Of the top 20 chemicals reported by the Toxics Release Inventory as released in the largest quantities into the environment in 1997, nearly three-quarters are known or suspected neurotoxicants. They include methanol, ammonia, manganese compounds, toluene, phosphoric acid, xylene, n-hexane, chlorine, methyl ethyl ketone, carbon disulfide, dichloromethane, styrene, lead compounds, and glycol ethers.


Over a billion pounds of these neurotoxic chemicals were released directly on-site by large, industrial facilities into the air, water, and land.
Vast quantities of neurotoxic chemicals are also used in industrial processes and incorporated into products. For example, according to 1997 data from the Massachusetts Toxics Use Reduction Act, over half of the top twenty chemicals in use (over 500 million pounds), and half of those incorporated into products in Massachusetts, are known or suspected neurotoxicants.
Use of lead in manufacturing increased 77% in Massachusetts between 1990-1997.
An additional 1.2 billion pounds of registered pesticide products are intentionally and legally released each year in the United States.
Mercury contamination of our waterways is so widespread that 40 states have issued one or more health advisories warning pregnant women or women of reproductive age to avoid or limit fish consumption. Ten states have issued advisories for every lake and river within the state's borders.

7. Environmental releases often lead to human exposures with potential for harm. Dispersion of these chemicals is global.
One million children in the US exceed the currently accepted threshold for blood lead level exposure that affects behavior and cognition (10 micrograms/dl). Updating the toxic threshold in keeping with the results of the most recent studies would further lower this threshold, resulting in the addition of millions children to the roles of those impaired by lead exposure.
A metabolite of the pesticide chlorpyrifos is present in the urine of over 80% of adults and 90% of children from representative population samples.
Inuit mothers in the Arctic, far from sources of industrial pollution, have some of the highest levels of PCBs in their breast milk as a result of a diet rich in marine mammal fat.

8. The historical record clearly reveals that our scientific understanding of the effects of toxic exposures is not sufficiently developed to accurately predict the impact of toxicants, and that our regulatory regime has failed to protect children.
a. As testing procedures advance, we learn that lower and lower doses are harmful.
The historical record shows that "safe thresholds" for known neurotoxicants have been continuously revised downward as scientific knowledge advances. For example, the initial "safe" blood lead level was set at 60 micrograms/deciliter (ug/dl) in 1960. This was revised down to 10 ug/dl in 1990. Current studies suggest that lead may have no identifiable exposure level that is "safe." The estimated "toxic threshold" for mercury has also relentlessly fallen, and like lead, any level of exposure may be harmful. Such results raise serious questions about the adequacy of the current regulatory regime, which, by design, permits children to be exposed up to "toxic thresholds" that rapidly become obsolete.
b. Most chemicals are not tested for their general toxicity in animals or humans, not to mention toxicity to a child's developing brain specifically.
Nearly 75% of the top high production and volume chemicals have undergone little or no toxicity testing. However, the EPA estimates that up to 28% of all chemicals in the current inventory of about 80,000 have neurotoxic potential. In addition:
Complete tests for developmental neurotoxicity have been submitted to EPA for only 12 chemicals - nine pesticides and three solvents Ð as of December 1998.
Testing for developmental neurotoxicity is not required even in the registration or re-registration of pesticides, one of the strictest areas of chemical regulation
c. Even when regulated, the risks from chemical exposure are estimated for one chemical at a time, while children are exposed to many toxicants in complex mixtures throughout development. Multiple chemical exposures often interact to magnify damaging effects or cause new types of harm.
With the exception of pesticides used on the food supply, current regimes regulate only one chemical at a time and do not take into account the potential for interactions. Since real world exposures are to multiple chemicals, current regulatory standards, based on single chemical exposures, are inherently incapable of providing adequate margins of safety.
New studies in humans and in the laboratory show that PCBs and mercury interact to cause harm at lower thresholds than either substance acting alone.
A recent 5-year pesticide study suggests that combinations of commonly used agricultural chemicals, in levels typically found in groundwater, can significantly influence immune and endocrine systems, as well as neurological function, in laboratory animals.
d. Animal studies generally underestimate human vulnerability to neurotoxicants.
Animal studies of lead, mercury and PCBs each underestimated the levels of exposures that cause effects in humans by 100-10,000-fold.
Regulatory decisions that rely largely on toxicity testing in genetically similar animals under controlled laboratory conditions will continue to fail to reflect threats to the capacities and complexity of the human brain as well as important gene-environment interactions.

9. Protecting our children from preventable and potentially harmful exposures requires a precautionary policy that can only occur with basic changes in the regulatory process.
The inability of the current regulatory system to protect public health is not surprising, considering the disproportionate influence of special interests in the regulatory process. When there is evidence for serious, widespread and irreversible harm, as described in this report, residual scientific uncertainties should not be used to delay precautionary actions. Actions should include reduction and or elimination of exposures as well as further scientific investigation of developmental neurotoxicity.

Framework for Understanding Learning, behavior, and developmental disabilities in children are clearly the result of complex interactions among chemical, genetic and social-environmental factors that influence children during vulnerable periods of development. This report focuses on the role of toxic exposures since they are a preventable cause of harm. The cognitive and behavioral characteristics that result from these interacting influences can be described as traits or abilities, such as attention or memory, which can be measured quantitatively using a variety of neuropsychological tests. Aggregates of these traits are often described using diagnostic labels that identify clinical syndromes, such as attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder, autism or learning disability. Such labels are useful for the purpose of providing clinical interventions. However, traits are generally better suited to research since they can be readily defined, quantitatively measured, and are more amenable to animal models. As a result, a large body of scientific data has begun to describe the effects of chemicals or other influences on neurodevelopment in terms of effects on traits, rather than on clinical syndromes associated with diagnostic labels. In addition, traits provide a common denominator between different fields of research, and allow us to acknowledge influences on the neurocognitive function of "normal" populations, as well as on those with diagnostic labels.
To go directly to the full 115 page report: http://www.preventingharm.org/pdf/IHWcomplete.pdf.
Originating website:
http://www.preventingharm.org/.

Pesticides and Flawed Frogs

Raising new questions about the environmental risks of some widely used farm chemicals, scientists are reporting today the first evidence linking agricultural runoff to grotesque hind-limb deformities in frogs.

Two frogs (upper left and upper right) have normal limbs, while the other four have deformities.
Penn State University photo by Joseph Kiesecker via Associated Press

Researchers said frogs appear to be made more vulnerable to a common parasite when exposed to the pesticides atrazine and malathion. The parasite, a burrowing trematode worm, tends to infect the hindquarters of developing tadpoles.

Atrazine is part of a family of chemicals that rank among the world's most widely used weed killers.
Malathion is commonly applied to control mosquitoes and other insects, and pharmaceutical grades are approved for killing head lice.

Both products are controversial but considered safe for commercial use in the United States.
Now, effects of these and other chemicals on the environment are coming under new scrutiny. This is most certainly an early warning of health problems affecting humans.

At last count, wild frogs with missing or extra hind limbs have been observed in at least 43 states and five Canadian provinces.
It is important to know that for malathion and atrazine; significant effects were seen even at concentrations considered safe for drinking water by the Environmental Protection Agency.

original article by: CARL T HALL / SF Chronicle 9jul02
You can read the whole ariticle at:

Sunday, May 20, 2007

Chemical Awareness in Schools



Chemical Awareness in Schools is an organization in Australia. Sure seems that Australia is looking out for their children a whole lot better than the U.S.and Canada.

source: http://www.netspeed.com.au/rdi/cas


Blog Widget by LinkWithin