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Wednesday, December 03, 2008 - 6:38 PM
Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire. U.S. agriculture has developed a heavy reliance on chemicals to
safeguard crops from yield-robbing weeds. However, many of those
herbicides can pose substantial health risks to people, pets, and
wildlife, which is why laws prescribe how some of these chemicals are
handled in fields. A study now finds that trace quantities of such
agricultural chemicals nonetheless find their way into consumers'
homes—not on the fruits and vegetables they buy but probably by
hitchhiking on dust. http://louishjhsheehan.blogspot.com
The findings are disturbing for a number of
reasons, not the least of which is the link between pesticide exposure
and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, a malignancy whose incidence has exploded
during recent years. Indeed, the new study was as an offshoot of a
larger non-Hodgkin's lymphoma study financed by the National Cancer
Institute. What the research shows is that home exposure to
agricultural weed killers increases as the acreage of nearby croplands
increases. http://louisbjbsheehan.blogspot.com
We don't fence them inIn their new
study, Mary H. Ward of the National Cancer Institute and her colleagues
collected dust vacuumed from the homes of 112 Iowa lymphoma patients or
healthy, randomly selected volunteers of their age. Using
satellite-generated maps of agricultural fields in the state, the team
calculated the acreage of croplands near the home of each participant.
Both farm and in-town homes were included in the study. This
being Iowa, much of the cropland had been historically planted with
corn and soybeans, almost all of which had been treated repeatedly with
protective herbicides. Ward's team probed homes for specific chemicals
known to have been used on the fields. Analyses showed that at
least one of six primarily agricultural herbicides was present in house
dust from 28 percent of sampled homes. These chemicals included
acetochlor, alachlor, atrazine, bentazon, fluazifop-p-butyl, and metolachlor. Atrazine
and metolachlor were the agents most commonly used to protect corn and
soybeans from weeds. The next most-popular weed killers used on the
crops were trifluralin and dicamba. At least one of these four
herbicides showed up in 43 percent of homes. Although atrazine
had been applied to nearly 70 percent of corn acreage, it showed up in
the house dust of only 8 percent of homes. Where detected, however, its
concentration in dust ranged from 60 to 4,700 parts per billion (ppb).
Metolachlor was found in about 20 percent of homes; its concentration
ranged from 27 to almost 3,200 ppb. However, such herbicide
contamination paled in comparison to the amount of dust containing
2,4-D, the third most widely used herbicide in the United States and
Canada. It was present in 95 percent of homes, typically in
concentrations exceeding 1,000 ppb. In one house, 2,4-D's values
reached an astounding 125,000 ppb. That it was the most abundant of the
chemicals might not be too surprising, Ward notes. Not only is this
chemical commonly employed to protect corn and soy, but it's also used
along roadsides, in forests, and on lawns to fight weeds. Luckily,
toxicity studies suggest that this is also one of the least toxic
herbicides to people and animals. http://louisijisheehan.blogspot.com
As these are some of the first
measurements of pesticides in house dust, the researchers don't have
much with which to compare them. Most previous correlations between
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and herbicides came from questionnaires where
data indicated only whether individuals had been exposed to certain
chemicals and for how long. Even in the current study, the measurements
offer only a snapshot of exposure on the day of dust collection. In
the new study, farm workers' homes were generally the most contaminated
with weed killers. Some herbicide concentrations in their dwellings
were more than triple those present in the homes of people who had
never worked in agriculture. Nearly 60 percent of the study's
participants lived within 550 yards of cropland. The chance of finding
agricultural weed killers in house dust increased by 6 percent for
every 10 acres of cropland found within a roughly 800-yard perimeter of
the house. The result was that herbicide-laced dust showed up in
three-quarters of homes having at least 300 acres of cropland within
that 800-yard perimeter. Ward's team published its findings in the June Environmental Health Perspectives. So what?Of
nearly 120 studies that have investigated the risk of non-Hodgkin's
lymphoma associated with pesticide contact, most showed increased
risk—especially for weed killers—according to the Lymphoma Foundation
of America. Printed information from the foundation states that the
pesticides "more frequently associated with increased lymphoma
incidence and/or deaths" are the herbicides 2,4-D and the triazines,
which includes atrazine. Such herbicides are typically used on corn. Some
of Ward's colleagues have examined whether residential use of weed
killers might contribute to risk of the cancer, but they've found no
evidence of that. In the April 2005 Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers & Prevention,
the scientists report that carpets in healthy people's homes were as
likely to contain the pesticides as were carpets in the homes of people
with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. The researchers also found no elevation in
the cancer's incidence among people who had used herbicides in or
around the home during the preceding 3 decades. What did emerge
in the team's investigations was some suggestion that people whose
homes had been treated for termites were at elevated risk of developing
the cancer. This risk was restricted to people whose homes had been
treated with chlordane before its residential use was banned in 1988. A
report of those findings appeared in the February Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers & Prevention. Last
November, Australian scientists linked non-Hodgkin's lymphoma with
workplace exposure to herbicides and other agricultural chemicals.
Overall, "substantial exposure to any pesticide trebled the risk of
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma," these researchers noted in the American Journal of Epidemiology. The herbicide 2,4-D was among those linked to the cancer. http://louisdjdsheehan.blogspot.com
A
year earlier, scientists from institutions throughout the United States
described finding an increased risk of certain cancers—including a
doubling in lymphomas—among the children of men who worked as pesticide
applicators. http://louiskjksheehan.blogspot.com
Cancer, however, is far from the only health or
environmental risk associated with agricultural pesticides. For
instance, some herbicides used on corn have been shown to disrupt
normal reproductive development—albeit in frogs, in studies so far (SN: 11/2/02, p. 275; 4/20/02, p. 243). Some biologists now suspect that such changes may explain declining amphibian populations. Agricultural
chemicals may also affect human fertility. Four years ago,
epidemiologist Shanna H. Swan of the University of Missouri and her
colleagues studied sperm in men from big cities and small towns. Sperm
concentrations and quality in men from semirural Missouri communities
were below those of men from Minneapolis, Los Angeles, and New York
City (SN: 11/23/02, p. 333). This suggests, Swan told Science News Online, that "environmental exposure to current-use pesticides is associated with poorer semen quality." http://louisgjgsheehan.blogspot.com
In
an extension of that study, the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention in Atlanta will soon measure agricultural pesticides in the
urine of men who had participated, notes Swan, now at the University of
Rochester. http://louisjjjsheehan.blogspot.com Clearly, there are lots of advantages to living in the
country: farm-fresh food, skies clear of urban pollution, and little
traffic. The new herbicide study suggests, however, that there can also
be at least one health drawback. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire
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