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Pesticides Exp : Pesticide linked to breast cancer
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From: Rene  (Original Message)Sent: 11/9/2006 12:35 AM
 

Pesticide linked to breast cancer

Breast cancer may be linked to environmental factors

A pesticide has been linked to increased risk of breast cancer.

Danish researchers have found that exposure to organochlorines increases a woman's chances of developing the deadly disease.

They believe the pesticide mimics the female sex hormone oestrogen.

Women who never have children or who experience a late menopause are known to be at a higher risk of developing breast cancer.

This is thought to be because their production of oestrogen remains uninterupted for a long period of their adult lives.

The Danish researchers scrutinised blood samples taken in 1976 from 7,712 women to test the link between organochlorines and breast cancer.

In 1996-97 they tested new blood samples for the presence of 48 substances from 268 women who had developed breast cancer.

'Significant' link

Writing in the Lancet medical journal, they claim one organochlorine pesticide known as dieldrin was "associated with a significantly dose-related risk of breast cancer".

Dr Annette Pernille Hoyer, who worked on the study, said: "I fear that the link is significant.

"The use of pesticides should be reduced as much as possible in general.

"Human beings are naive when they do not believe that a poison designed to kill living organisms does not harm them.

"We should have as healthy food and a clean environment as possible."

Dr Pernille Hoyer said a test was needed to measure the disruption that substances can cause to the hormonal system.

Doubts raised

Professor David Phillips, of the Institute of Cancer Research, questioned the value of the research.

He said other studies had cast doubt on the theory that organochlorines acted as weak oestrogens.

"This research tested 48 compounds and only one showed any significant association with breast cancer - that is not far outside the bounds of coincidence," Professor Phillips said.

 

DDT: An organochlorine pesticide which has been banned

"This study is part of the continuing effort to understand why breast cancer has increased in recent years, but is not likely to provide a major reason."

Professor Phillips added that most organochlorines were being phased out in the UK.

Other organochlorine pesticides include Lindane, atrazine and DDT.

Atrazine is the most common pesticide found in UK drinking water, whilst DDT has been banned in the developed world for many years.

DDT metabolites have recently been shown to block the action of male hormones.

Workers exposed to high levels of the pesticide chlordecone suffer decreased sperm motility and abnormal sperm.

From: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/227178.stm

 

Introduction to Hormone Disrupting Chemicals

These pages provide an introduction to the effects of hormone disrupting chemicals on man and the environment, and the response of Governments and industry to this problem. Other terms used to describe these chemicals include xenoestrogens, oestrogenic (estrogenic), hormone mimicking and endocrine disrupting chemicals.

These pages are aimed at anyone interested in the subject, and include references to other research and reviews for those interested in investigating the field further.

http://website.lineone.net/~mwarhurst/

 



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From: ReneSent: 2/27/2007 5:07 PM

The Killing Fields

Study links breast cancer to farm work

 

13 Oct 2006:-  October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month. Think that has nothing to do with the environment? Guess again. A new study of women in Windsor, Ontario, found that those who have worked on a farm are 2.8 times more likely to develop breast cancer than those who haven't. The research was published yesterday in the Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. "If you were going to hypothesize about the No. 1 most likely cause of this elevated risk, I think you'd have to look at the whole chemical exposure that exists on farms," said lead author James Brophy, rather diplomatically. He implicated diesel fumes, antibiotics, growth hormones, and, of course, pesticides, many of which can block normal functioning of hormones like estrogen. Interestingly, for women who worked in agriculture and then moved on to the auto industry, the cancer likelihood was bumped from 2.8 to four times. Plenty of other researchers are also studying the possibility that breast cancer is tied to environmental pollution, as Francesca Lyman reports in the latest issue of Ms. Magazine

 

//grist.org/news/daily/2006/10/13/