Posts Tagged poison

Chemical From Plastic Water Bottles Found Throughout Oceans

A survey of 200 sites in 20 countries around the world has found that bisphenol A, a synthetic compound that mimics estrogen and is linked to developmental disorders, is ubiquitous in Earth’s oceans.

Bisphenol A, or BPA, is found mostly in shatter-proof plastics and epoxy resins. Most people have trace amounts in their bodies, likely absorbed from food containers. Its hormone-mimicking properties make it a potent endocrine system disruptor.

In recent years, scientists have moved from studying BPA’s damaging effects in laboratory animals to linking it to heart disease, sterility and altered childhood development in humans. Many questions still remain about dosage effects and the full nature of those links, but in January the U.S. Food and Drug Administration announced that “recent studies provide reason for some concern about the potential effects of BPA on the brain, behavior, and prostate gland of fetuses, infants and children.”

The oceanic BPA survey, presented March 23 at an American Chemical Society meeting in San Francisco, was conducted by Nihon University chemists Katsuhiko Saido and Hideto Sato. At an ACS meeting last year, they described how soft plastic in seawater doesn’t just float or sink intact, but can break down rapidly, releasing toxins. In their new findings, they showed that BPA-containing hard plastics can break down too, and found BPA in ocean water and sand at concentrations ranging from .01 to .50 parts per million.

As for what those numbers mean for public and environmental health, it’s hard to say. BPA can cause reproductive disorders in shellfish and crustaceans, and doses below a single part per trillion can have cell-level effects, but the path from water and sand to ocean animals needs to be studied.

One disturbing possibility is that BPA could bioaccumulate, with animals eating BPA-tainted animals that have eaten BPA-tainted animals, finally reaching high concentrations in top-level ocean predators and the humans who eat them. For that to happen, BPA would have to be stored in fatty tissue, rather than passing quickly through the body.

“That’s a really difficult, unsettled question,” said Shanna Swan, a University of Rochester environmental medicine specialist who wasn’t involved in the survey.

In a 2009 Environmental Health Perspectives study of BPA concentrations in people who had recently fasted, Swan found that BPA levels remained high longer than expected. It’s possible that BPA indeed accumulated in their fat, said Swan. They could also have picked up BPA from as-yet-unappreciated non-dietary sources, such as household dust or leaching from PVC water pipes. Or both scenarios may be true.

The BPA contamination found by Saido and Sato likely comes from a mix of boat paint and plastic. About three million tons of BPA-containing plastics are produced each year. The United Nations estimates that the average square mile of ocean contains 46,000 pieces of plastic trash.

“Marine debris plastic in the ocean will certainly constitute a new global ocean contamination for long into the future,” wrote Saido and Sato in their presentation.

By Brandon Keim

Image: Polihale/Wikipedia

Read More at Wired.com

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TransFats in Malta

In recent years, trans-fats have risen to the top of the food-and-health agenda. A number of studies have linked trans-fats to coronary heart disease and, as a consequence, food manufacturers, governments and consumers are increasingly concerned about trans-fats: what they are, which foods they appear in and how consumption of them may affect health.

Trans-fats: a brief history

About 100 years ago the discovery was made that liquid oils could be converted to solid fats (which were more useful in food manufacture) by a procedure called hydrogenation. As hydrogen was added to liquid unsaturated oil it gradually became a solid saturated fat (also called a hydrogenated fat).

After the Second World War the process for making hydrogenated and hardened fats from cheaper sources of vegetable oils was widely adopted. Margarines were developed and marketed as alternatives to butter, and vegetable shortenings increasingly replaced the animal fats in cooking.

As early as 1975 a group of scientists led by Mr Leo Thomas at what is now the University of Glamorgan in South Wales suspected that eating partially hydrogenated fats had a connection with death from coronary heart disease. The suspected link between the consumption of trans-fats and this illness was subsequently investigated at the Harvard School of Public Health in the US. It is now generally accepted that trans-fats are actually worse for the health than the saturated animal fats they were designed to replace.

Food-labelling and trans-fats

There has been increasing acceptance by governments that the risks to consumers of eating trans-fats in quantity cannot be ignored. In 2003 Denmark became the first country to introduce laws to control the sale of foods containing trans-fats. In the same year, Canada required that the presence of trans-fats be shown on food labels, and in the following year the Canadian government essentially banned the use of trans-fats in food altogether.

In January 2006 it became law in the US that the content of trans-fats has to be specifically listed on food labels. There is a complication to this, however, because foods containing less than 0.5g of trans-fats per serving can be labelled as being free from them. Furthermore, the regulations only apply to food labels: food sold in restaurants and canteens are not covered by this law.

However, in December 2006 New York City’s Board of Health ‘banned’ many trans-fats from the city’s restaurants, prompting similar moves in Philadelphia, Montgomery County in Maryland, and the Boston suburb of Brookline. The first phase of the regulation applies to oils, shortening and margarines used in cooking and as spreads, in recipes that contain more than a half-gram of trans-fat per serving.

The second phase, in July 2008, extended the ban to include trans-fats used in bread and cakes, prepared foods, salad dressings and oils used for deep-frying or in dough or cake batter. Similar ‘bans’ are being proposed in a growing number of cities, towns and states across the US.

What are trans fats?

Trans fats (or trans fatty acids) are created in an industrial process that adds hydrogen to liquid vegetable oils to make them more solid.  Another name for trans fats is “partially hydrogenated oils.”  Look for them on the ingredient list on food packages.

Why do some companies use trans fats?

Companies like using trans fats in their foods because they’re easy to use, inexpensive to produce and last a long time.  Trans fats give foods a desirable taste and texture.  Many restaurants and fast-food outlets use trans fats to deep-fry foods because oils with trans fats can be used many times in commercial fryers.

How do trans fats affect my health?

Trans fats raise your bad (LDL) cholesterol levels and lower your good (HDL) cholesterol levels.  Eating trans fats increases your risk of developing heart disease and stroke.  It’s also associated with a higher risk of developing type 2 diabetes.

Why did trans fats become so popular if they have such bad health effects?

Before 1990, very little was known about how trans fat can harm your health.  In the 1990s, research began identifying the adverse health effects of trans fats.

What foods contain trans fats? and how do I avoid them?

“In the UK and many other European countries the situation is complicated. Although there is no specific requirement for the labelling of trans-fats on food labels, some manufacturers have started to do so voluntarily. Most of the margarines and vegetable shortenings on supermarket shelves now show the products as being ‘virtually free of trans-fats’; on the other hand products such as cakes and biscuits that include hydrogenated fats in the ingredient lists do not often mention trans-fats. Food manufacturers and suppliers are increasingly turning the absence of trans-fats into a marketing claim for their products. In the UK, in February 2006, Marks and Spencer announced in full page adverts in the national press that they had removed all hydrogenated fats from their ready meals.”

Trans fats can be found in many foods – but especially in fried foods like French fries and doughnuts, and baked goods including pastries, pie crusts, biscuits, pizza dough, cookies, crackers, and stick margarines and shortenings.  You can determine the amount of trans fats in a particular packaged food by looking at the Nutrition Facts label.  You can also spot trans fats by reading ingredient lists and looking for the ingredients referred to as hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated fats or shortenings.  When cooking at home use liquid vegetable oil for frying and only margarines and shortenings that are labelled trans-fat free. If you can check these details with the managers of restaurants or takeaways then even better for you.”

Are there any naturally occurring trans fats?

Small amounts of trans fats occur naturally in some meat and dairy products, including beef, lamb and butterfat.  It isn’t clear; though, whether these naturally occurring trans fats have the same bad effects on cholesterol levels as trans fats that have been industrially manufactured.

How much trans fat can I eat a day?

The American Heart Association recommends limiting the amount of trans fats you eat to less than 1 percent of your total daily calories.  That means if you need 2,000 calories a day, no more than 20 of those calories should come from trans fats.  That’s less than 2 grams of trans fats a day.  Given the amount of naturally occurring trans fats you probably eat every day, this leaves virtually no room at all for industrially manufactured trans fats.

How can I stay within my daily limit for trans fats?

Read the Nutrition Facts label on foods you buy at the store and, when eating out, ask what kind of oil foods are cooked in.  Replace the trans fats in your diet with monounsaturated or  polyunsaturated fats.  For practical tips, learn how to Live Fat-Sensibly.

Foods in Malta that contain Trans fats:

Hopla Golosa e Leggera – Spray Whip Cream

Calve Peanut Butter – Both Crunchy and Smooth

Mill-Kcina taz-Zija (Torta tat-Tigieg)

Kuchenmeister Tiramisu Cafe Venezia 400g

KuchenMeister Herren-Kuchen (Chocolate Cake) 400g

7 Days ‘Bake-it’ Frozen Pastries

Nick The Easy Rider Peanut Butter

Elmlea Single and Double Cream

Hershey’s Reese’s Pieces

Crunch 'n Munch

Crunch n’ Munch

This is not a complete list, but a growing one, that will hopefully one day inspire the Maltese Government to join the growing list of countries in Banning Trans fats.

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Low lead levels harming children

Lead is linked to a number of health problems

Young childrens exposure to lead in the environment is harming their intellectual and emotional development, according to UK researchers.The researchers say the toxic effects of lead on the central nervous system are obvious even below the current so-called safe level of lead in the blood.They are recommending the threshold should be halved.A spokesman for the Health Protection Agency said levels of exposure should be kept to the minimum.Lead has been removed from paint and petrol by law in the UK, but it is still widespread in the environment.The study from the University of Bristol Centre for Child and Adolescent Health set out to see if there was any effect on the behaviour and intellectual development of children who had ingested just below the so-called safe level of 10 microgrammes per decilitre or tenth of a litre of blood.The study is published in the journal, Archives of Diseases in Childhood.

SOURCES OF LEAD

  • Lead-based paint
  • Household dust
  • Lead water pipes
  • Soil around the home
  • Paint on childrens toys
  • Childrens bead necklaces
  • Christmas lights
  • Lead smelters/industries

Lead levels

The Bristol researchers took blood samples from 582 children at the age of 30 months.They found 27% of the children had lead levels above five microgrammes per decilitre.They followed the childrens progress at regular intervals and then assessed their academic performance and behavioural patterns when they were seven to eight years old.After taking account of factors likely to influence the results, they found that blood lead levels at 30 months showed significant associations with educational achievement, antisocial behaviour and hyperactivity scores five years later.With lead levels up to five microgrammes per decilitre, there was no obvious effect.But lead levels between five and 10 microgrammes per decilitre were associated with significantly poorer scores for reading 49% lower and writing 51% lower.A doubling in lead blood levels to 10 microgrammes per decilitre was associated with a drop of a third of a grade in their Scholastic Assessment Tests SATs.And above 10 microgrammes per decilitre children were almost three times as likely to display antisocial behaviour patterns and be hyperactive than the children with the lower levels of lead in their blood.Adverse effectsThe effects of lead toxicity in children were first described in 1892 in Brisbane, Australia. The Agencys advice is that exposures to lead should be kept to the minimum that is reasonably practical Health Protection Agency spokesmanSince then acceptable levels of lead in the blood have fallen sharply.In 1991, the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, revised their level of concern for blood levels down to ten microgrammes per declitre.The World Health Organisation estimates that globally half of the urban children under the age of five have blood levels exceeding this limit.Professor Alan Emond, who led this study, said a third of the children in his study had levels only half of this but were still exhibiting adverse effects.He said: “Lead in the body is one of many factors that impacts on education, but this is a reminder that environmental factors are important and paediatricians must test more children with behavioural problems for lead.”"We did our blood survey when the children were about two and a half years old.”We think this is quite close to the peak age for lead ingestion when the children are putting everything in their mouths as they explore their environment.”This is a normal phase that we grow out of, but for children who have developmental problems, like autism, it may go on for a longer time so they may be particularly vulnerable. “A Health Protection Agency spokesman said: “The Agencys advice is that exposures to lead should be kept to the minimum that is reasonably practical.”This has been the policy in the UK and of health agencies throughout the world for many years.”Measurements have shown that levels of lead in children and adults have decreased markedly over the last two decades or more, primarily because of these policies.”

via BBC NEWS | Health | Low lead levels harming children.

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