- :: Atom & Cosmos
- :: Body & Brain
- :: Earth
- :: Environment
- :: Genes & Cells
- :: Humans
- :: Life
- :: Matter & Energy
- :: Molecules
- :: Science & Society
- :: Other Topics
- :: Science News For Kids
Urine levels of the chemical bisphenol A, found in many plastics, are strongly linked to type 2 diabetes, heart disease and liver enzyme problems, a new study suggests. The study, which examined a representative sample of the adult U.S population, appears in the Sept. 17 Journal of the American Medical Association.
“This is good news and bad news,” comments Richard Stahlhut, an environmental health research fellow at the
In August, the Food and Drug Administration issued a draft assessment of bisphenol A that decrees the chemical safe at current exposure levels. The FDA’s bisphenol A subcommittee discussed that draft assessment at a public briefing in
The study is based on the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, or NHANES, conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. NHANES uses physical examinations, clinical and lab tests and personal interviews to get a snapshot of the health and nutritional status of the
“This is CDC government data — it’s done with very, very strict criteria,” says
Bisphenol A is the starter material for many plastics, including those used in baby bottles, some dental sealants and the lining of aluminum cans. Production of the chemical worldwide has reached nearly 7 billion pounds per year.
Years of studies on laboratory animals have linked the chemical, which mimics the hormone estrogen, to liver damage, obesity, insulin resistance and a suite of reproductive problems. In April the
"The FDA is now looking and they have decided BPA is not a problem, in spite of the evidence for harm gathered in animal studies. I think this paper argues otherwise,” says Ana M. Soto, an endocrinologist at Tufts University School of Medicine in
The new study gauged bisphenol A levels in the urine of 1,455 adults, aged 18 to 74. Data were adjusted for age, sex, smoking, education and other factors. People with the highest bisphenol A levels (in the top one-fourth of the study population) were more than twice as likely to have diabetes and heart disease as those with lower levels. Higher bisphenol A levels were also associated with abnormal liver enzyme concentrations.
“In one sense it is all a surprise — this is evidence from a survey,” says David Melzer, a public health physician and epidemiologist at the
Based on the urine samples, the researchers estimate that the quarter of participants with the highest bisphenol A levels were probably exposed to an average of 50 micrograms a day, versus 10 micrograms a day in the lowest group. Those levels are far below those currently considered to be safe. In the
Studies that find correlations cannot be interpreted as cause and effect, caution the researchers. “These are clues that now need to be followed up on,” says Stahlhut.
In the scope of human history, it is only recently that people have gotten so good at making chemicals, says Stahlhut. “It makes perfect sense that we would eventually stumble on a chemical that causes a lot of problems at low doses. BPA might turn out to be a big offender."
At the FDA's subcommittee meeting, FDA toxicologist Michelle Twaroski outlined the agency's draft assessment, released in August, that decreed current bisphenol A exposure levels safe. The panel then heard comments from more than two dozen critics and supporters of the draft's conclusions.
John Van Miller, a representative of a group of bisphenol A producers, called the FDA assessment "thorough, objective, transparent and strongly supported by scientific data."
Diana Zuckerman, a doctor representing the National Research Center for Women and Families, voiced concern about the FDA's estimates of how much bisphenol A might leach into canned baby formula. "There's plenty of reason for concern," Zuckerman said. "The FDA draws concern about safety from industry's rose-colored glasses.
The subcommittee devoted the final hour and a half of the meeting to questioning an invited panel of scientists about which avenues of inquiry should be pursued to learn more about bisphenol A's health effects.
Found in: Body & Brain and Science & Society
- Popular plastics chemical poses further threat
- Clearly Concerning
- Diabetes from a Plastic? Estrogen mimic provokes insulin resistance
- Boyish Brains: Plastic chemical alters behavior of female mice
- Lang Iain A. . . . and D. Melzer. 2008. Association of urinary bisphenol A concentration with medical disorders and laboratory abnormalities in adults. Journal of the American Medical Association 300(Sept. 17):1303.
- Losing Louisiana
- Iron-ic twist deepens cosmic ray puzzle
- Glass beads cluster as they flow
- Stone Age flutes found in Germany
- Baby Milky Way modeled

Check out this article for more: http://personalmoneystore.com/moneyblog/2009/03/27/planet-hospital-lures-patients-save-medical-care/
Please login or register to participate.