Plastic People

A recent study shows residues from household plastic products in the human body. I have spoken to some degree about the possibility of toxic effects of the excessive use of plastics, now it appears as though the dangers go further than the base chemicals of plastics and the body can actually reatin some polymer as well.

Article courtesy of Science News Online.

How Plastic We've Become

Our bodies carry residues of kitchen plastics

Janet Raloff

In the 1967 film classic The Graduate, a businessman corners Benjamin Braddock at a cocktail party and gives him a bit of career advice. "Just one word…plastics."

Although Benjamin didn't heed that recommendation, plenty of other young graduates did. Today, the planet is awash in products spawned by the plastics industry. Residues of plastics have become ubiquitous in the environment—and in our bodies.

A federal government study now reports that bisphenol A (BPA)—the building block of one of the most widely used plastics—laces the bodies of the vast majority of U.S. residents young and old.

Manufacturers link BPA molecules into long chains, called polymers, to make polycarbonate plastics. All of those clear, brittle plastics used in baby bottles, food ware, and small kitchen appliances (like food-processor bowls) are made from polycarbonates. BPA-based resins also line the interiors of most food, beer, and soft-drink cans. With use and heating, polycarbonates can break down, leaching BPA into the materials they contact. Such as foods.

And that could be bad if what happens in laboratory animals also happens in people, because studies in rodents show that BPA can trigger a host of harmful changes, from reproductive havoc to impaired blood-sugar control and obesity (SN: 9/29/07, p. 202).

For the new study, scientists analyzed urine from some 2,500 people who had been recruited between 2003 and 2004 for the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). Roughly 92 percent of the individuals hosted measurable amounts of BPA, according to a report in the January Environmental Health Perspectives. It's the first study to measure the pollutant in a representative cross-section of the U.S. population.
Typically, only small traces of BPA turned up, concentrations of a few parts per billion in urine, note chemist Antonia M. Calafat and her colleagues at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. However, with hormone-mimicking agents like BPA, even tiny exposures can have notable impacts.

Overall, concentrations measured by Calafat's team were substantially higher than those that have triggered disease, birth defects, and more in exposed animals, notes Frederick S. vom Saal, a University of Missouri-Columbia biologist who has been probing the toxicology of BPA for more than 15 years.

The BPA industry describes things differently. Although Calafat's team reported urine concentrations of BPA, in fact they assayed a breakdown product—the compound by which BPA is excreted, notes Steven G. Hentges of the American Chemistry Council's Polycarbonate/BPA Global Group. As such, he argues, "this does not mean that BPA itself is present in the body or in urine."
On the other hand, few people have direct exposure to the breakdown product.

Hentges' group estimates that the daily BPA intake needed to create urine concentrations reported by the CDC scientists should be in the neighborhood of 50 nanograms per kilogram of bodyweight—or one millionth of an amount at which "no adverse effects" were measured in multi-generation animal studies. In other words, Hentges says, this suggests "a very large margin of safety."

No way, counters vom Saal. If one applies the ratio of BPA intake to excreted values in hosts of published animal studies, concentrations just reported by CDC suggest that the daily intake of most Americans is actually closer to 100 micrograms (µg) per kilogram bodyweight, he says—or some 1,000-fold higher than the industry figure.
Clearly, there are big differences of opinion and interpretation. And a lot may rest on who's right.

Globally, chemical manufacturers produce an estimated 2.8 million tons of BPA each year. The material goes into a broad range of products, many used in and around the home. BPA also serves as the basis of dental sealants, which are resins applied to the teeth of children to protect their pearly whites from cavities (SN: 4/6/96, p. 214). The industry, therefore, has a strong economic interest in seeing that the market for BPA-based products doesn't become eroded by public concerns over the chemical.
And that could happen. About 2 years after a Japanese research team showed that BPA leached out of baby bottles and plastic food ware (see What's Coming Out of Baby's Bottle?), manufacturers of those consumer products voluntarily found BPA substitutes for use in food cans. Some 2 years after that, a different group of Japanese scientists measured concentrations of BPA residues in the urine of college students. About half of the samples came from before the switch, the rest from after the period when BPA was removed from food cans.

By comparing urine values from the two time periods, the researchers showed that BPA residues were much lower—down by at least 50 percent—after Japanese manufacturers had eliminated BPA from the lining of food cans.

Concludes vom Saal, in light of the new CDC data and a growing body of animal data implicating even low-dose BPA exposures with the potential to cause harm, "the most logical thing" for the United States to do would be to follow in Japan's footsteps and "get this stuff [BPA] out of our food."


Broken into two sections due to size.
 
Part two.


Kids appear most exposed

Overall, men tend to have statistically lower concentrations of BPA than women, the NHANES data indicate. But the big difference, Calafat says, traces to age. "Children had higher concentrations than adolescents, and they in turn had higher levels than adults," she told Science News Online.
This decreasing body burden with older age "is something we have seen with some other nonpersistent chemicals," Calafat notes—such as phthalates, another class of plasticizers.

The spread between the average BPA concentration that her team measured in children 6 to 11 years old (4.5 µg/liter) and adults (2.5 µg/L) doesn't look like much, but proved reliably different.

The open question is why adults tended to excrete only 55 percent as much BPA. It could mean children have higher exposures, she posits, or perhaps that they break it down less efficiently. "We really need to do more research to be able to answer that question."

Among other differences that emerged in the NHANES analysis: urine residues of BPA decreased with increasing household income and varied somewhat with ethnicity (with Mexican-Americans having the lowest average values, blacks the highest, and white's values in between).
There was also a time-of-day difference, with urine values for any given group tending to be highest in the evening, lowest in the afternoon, and midway between those in the morning. Since BPA's half-life in the body is only about 6 hours, that temporal variation in the chemical's excretion would be consistent with food as a major source of exposure, the CDC scientists note.

In the current NHANES paper, BPA samples were collected only once from each recruit. However, in a paper due to come out in the February Environmental Health Perspectives, Calafat and colleagues from several other institutions looked at how BPA excretion varied over a 2-year span among 82 individuals—men and women—seen at a fertility clinic in Boston.
In contrast to the NHANES data, the upcoming report shows that men tended to have somewhat higher BPA concentrations than women. Then again both groups had only about one-quarter the concentration typical of Americans.

The big difference in the Boston group emerged among the 10 women who ultimately became pregnant. Their BPA excretion increased 33 percent during pregnancy. Owing to the small number of participants in this subset of the study population, the pregnancy-associated change was not statistically significant. However, the researchers report, these are the first data to look for changes during pregnancy and ultimately determining whether some feature of pregnancy—such as a change in diet or metabolism of BPA—really alters body concentrations of the pollutant could be important. It could point to whether the fetus faces an unexpectedly high exposure to the pollutant.

If it does, the fetus could face a double whammy: Not only would exposures be higher during this period of organ and neural development, but rates of detoxification also would be diminished, vom Saal says.
Indeed, in a separate study, one due to be published soon in Reproductive Toxicology, his team administered BPA by ingestion or by injection to 3-day-old mice. Either way, the BPA exposure resulted in comparable BPA concentrations in blood.

What's more, that study found, per unit of BPA delivered, blood values in the newborns were "markedly higher" than other studies have reported for adult rodents exposed to the chemical. And that makes sense, vom Saal says, because the enzyme needed to break BPA down and lead to its excretion is only a tenth as active in babies as in adults. That's true in the mouse, he says, in the rat—and, according to some preliminary data, in humans. Vom Saal contends that since studies have shown BPA exhibits potent hormonelike activity in human cells at the parts-per-trillion level, and since the new CDC study finds that most people are continually exposed to concentrations well above the parts-per-trillion ballpark, it's time to reevaluate whether it makes sense to use BPA-based products in and around foods.
 
Well the good thing is that the body is expelling this poly chain, unlike transfat that gets stuck in the body.

Question for Evan: Are they just speaking of soft plastics? What of the hard plastics or does it not make difference?
 
Well the good thing is that the body is expelling this poly chain, unlike transfat that gets stuck in the body.

Question for Evan: Are they just speaking of soft plastics? What of the hard plastics or does it not make difference?

Primarily it is a soft plastics issue, however there is an abundance of danger in microwaving food in plastic bowls, plates etc.

There are chemicals that that process "leeches" out of the container, and into your food:yuk
 
Primarily it is a soft plastics issue, however there is an abundance of danger in microwaving food in plastic bowls, plates etc.

There are chemicals that that process "leeches" out of the container, and into your food:yuk
You know the GLAD tupperware - is this the soft plastic they are speaking of?
What about the old time tupperware - hard plastic - is this less likely to 'leech'?

I'm I understanding this correctly?

Also there are plenty of things that go through our body and are not digested. Things like fiber ... and this is good for us. If this polychain is so large that it is not diffusing into the bloodstream and it is being expelled - I don't really see a problem.

I see where they injected a rat with it, but other than that it found in the urine/waste and not the blood ... unless I am missing something here?
 
You know the GLAD tupperware - is this the soft plastic they are speaking of?
What about the old time tupperware - hard plastic - is this less likely to 'leech'?

I'm I understanding this correctly?

Also there are plenty of things that go through our body and are not digested. Things like fiber ... and this is good for us. If this polychain is so large that it is not diffusing into the bloodstream and it is being expelled - I don't really see a problem.

I see where they injected a rat with it, but other than that it found in the urine/waste and not the blood ... unless I am missing something here?

The school of thought I come from is that you never.....Never microwave anything in a plastic bowl, not matter hard or soft.

And polychains are not that only dangers, albeit, there is nothing good that comes from ingesting polymers, of any kind.

And the toxicity lies in the chemical that are used to create the polymers, the base materials more than anything.
 
Is this chemical not being expelled? Is it diffusing into the blood stream?


Well, there are chemicals that do in fact get abosorbed into the bloodstream, quite rapidly in fact. And they actually attack the bone marrow.

Some of it is expelled as waste, but you do have to understand, if it gets into your stomach, there is always the possibility that it is being absorbed into the bloodstream.

Synthetic chemicals have the potential to play total hell with your system, as a matter of fact, I could argue that a vast majority of fatigue, sickness and psychological issues stem at least partially from toxic substance ingestion.

As a matter of fact, I started a thread a week or two ago called "What's In It?"

It is dedicated to raising the awareness to folks about what is in what you eat, clean with and wear. I have not posted there in a spell, but I am going to get back on it.
 
as you know i drive all my friends mad with the eco friendly ...several years ago i threw out all plastic containers and never allow any thing plastic into the micro wave(if packaged etc)

i wont allow plastic cookware into the house because of this problem and also the wanton waist of fossil fuels in their production.

buying freee range and organic means that the packaging is more acceptable.

so i may drive my family bananas ,but they are healthier
 
Well, there are chemicals that do in fact get abosorbed into the bloodstream, quite rapidly in fact. And they actually attack the bone marrow. Some of it is expelled as waste, but you do have to understand, if it gets into your stomach, there is always the possibility that it is being absorbed into the bloodstream.
Yes, I understand this. Many things are too large to be absorbed into the bloodstream though and this is what I am asking as the article is not clear unless I am possibly missing something.

Synthetic chemicals have the potential to play total hell with your system, as a matter of fact, I could argue that a vast majority of fatigue, sickness and psychological issues stem at least partially from toxic substance ingestion.
Please understand I am not arguing this point. I know this. I am just trying to understand a certain aspect of the OP article.
 
as you know i drive all my friends mad with the eco friendly ...several years ago i threw out all plastic containers and never allow any thing plastic into the micro wave(if packaged etc)

i wont allow plastic cookware into the house because of this problem and also the wanton waist of fossil fuels in their production.

buying freee range and organic means that the packaging is more acceptable.

so i may drive my family bananas ,but they are healthier
What do you put your leftovers in?
 
Yes, I understand this. Many things are too large to be absorbed into the bloodstream though and this is what I am asking as the article is not clear unless I am possibly missing something.

No, you are correct, the article focuses on what is or can be absorbed ;)


Please understand I am not arguing this point. I know this. I am just trying to understand a certain aspect of the OP article.

You arguing with me never entered my mind babe, I was just re-emphasizing the obvious:D

Ya know...Imma man:p
 
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