When it comes to Bisphenol A (BPA) exposure from polycarbonate plastic
bottles, it’s not whether the container is new or old but the liquid’s
temperature that has the most impact on how much BPA is released,
according to University of Cincinnati (UC) scientists.
Scott Belcher, PhD, and his team found when the same new and used
polycarbonate drinking bottles were exposed to boiling hot water, BPA,
an environmental estrogen, was released 55 times more rapidly than
before exposure to hot water.
“Previous studies have shown that if you repeatedly scrub, dish-wash
and boil polycarbonate baby bottles, they release BPA. That tells us
that BPA can migrate from various polycarbonate plastics,” explains
Belcher, UC associate professor of pharmacology and cell biophysics and
corresponding study author. “But we wanted to know if ‘normal’ use
caused increased release from something that we all use, and to
identify what was the most important factor that impacts release.”
“Inspired by questions from the climbing community, we went directly to
tests based on how consumers use these plastic water bottles and showed
that the only big difference in exposure levels revolved around liquid
temperature: Bottles used for up to nine years released the same amount
of BPA as new bottles.”
The UC team reports its findings in the Jan. 30, 2008 issue of the
journal Toxicology Letters.
BPA is one of many man-made chemicals classified as endocrine
disruptors, which alter the function of the endocrine system by
mimicking the role of the body’s natural hormones. Hormones are
secreted through endocrine glands and serve different functions
throughout the body.
The chemical—which is widely used in products such as reusable water
bottles, food can linings, water pipes and dental sealants—has been
shown to affect reproduction and brain development in animal studies.
“There is a large body of scientific evidence demonstrating the harmful
effects of very small amounts of BPA in laboratory and animal studies,
but little clinical evidence related to humans,” explains Belcher.
“There is a very strong suspicion in the scientific community, however,
that this chemical has harmful effects on humans.” Belcher’s team
analyzed used polycarbonate water bottles from a local climbing gym and
purchased new bottles of the same brand from an outdoor retail
supplier.
All bottles were subjected to seven days of testing designed to
simulate normal usage during backpacking, mountaineering and other
outdoor adventure activities.
The UC researchers found that the amount of BPA released from new and
used polycarbonate drinking bottles was the same—both in quantity and
speed of release—into cool or temperate water. However, drastically
higher levels of BPA were released once the bottles were briefly
exposed to boiling water.
“Compared to the rate of release from the same bottle, the speed of
release was 15 to 55 times faster,” explains Belcher.
Prior to boiling water exposure, the rate of release from individual
bottles ranged from 0.2 to 0.8 nanograms per hour. After exposure,
rates increased to 8 to 32 nanograms per hour.
Belcher stresses that it is still unclear what level of BPA is harmful
to humans. He urges consumers to think about how cumulative
environmental exposures might harm their health.
“BPA is just one of many estrogen-like chemicals people are exposed to,
and scientists are still trying to figure out how these endocrine
disruptors—including natural phyto-estrogens from soy which are often
considered healthy—collectively impact human health,” he says. “But a
growing body of scientific evidence suggests it might be at the cost of
your health.”
Original
Source
|
|
|||||||||
|
Shabbat Times
Subscribe 4 Updates
About Us
Search
Donations
This Month
Month Archive
Recent Photos
Login
|
Heating Baby Bottles Releases Gender-Bending Chemical
Comments
No comments found.
Trackbacks
TrackBack URL: |
||||||||
|
|
|||||||||

![Validate my RSS feed [Valid RSS]](http://www.battalionofdeborah.org/logos/valid-rss.png)