
Many  of the human body’s process, including reproduction, mental processing  and metabolism, are controlled and regulated by hormones, chemical  "messengers" produced by the endocrine glands. In the embryo and fetus,  hormones guide the development of the brain, the nervous and immune  systems, the sexual organs, and the liver, blood and kidneys, among  other organs and tissue.
 
Hormones  work by attaching to "receptors," molecules on cell surfaces that carry  information into the cells, triggering certain actions. In recent  years, scientists have found that certain man-made chemicals disrupt  this process by blocking it altogether, throwing off the timing--or by  actually mimicking natural hormones and binding with the cells  themselves. Such chemicals have been dubbed "hormone disruptors." 
 
Since  the 1940s thousands of chemicals have been released into our air, water  and food. Chemicals now contaminate virtually every corner of the  globe, and the average person has over 100 chemicals in his or her body.  In one study of pregnant women, the average woman had 286 chemicals in her fetal blood.
 
Many  of the worst chemicals have been banned or phased out, but they  continue to linger in the environment and will no doubt do so for  centuries to come. Among the worst culprits in hormone disruption are:  PCBs, used heavily in the electrical industries until banned in 1978;  phthalates, still widely used in the plastics industry; and dioxin, one  of the most hazardous of all chemicals, a byproduct of paper-bleaching,  waste incineration and coal-burning, among other industrial activities.
 
The effects of this growing "chemical soup" were first noticed in wildlife. Alligators in Florida’s Lake Apopka, for example, have been unable to reproduce in recent years due to underdevelopment in young males. North Sea  seals exposed to synthetic chemicals have also developed reproductive  problems as well as suppressed immune systems. And gull colonies in California  and elsewhere suffered significant population losses after exposure to  chemicals interfered with their reproductive capabilities. 
 
According to Our Stolen Future, co-authored by Dr. Theo Colburn of the World Wildlife Fund, former Boston Globe  reporter Dianne Dumanoski and Dr. J.P. Myers, now Senior Advisor to the  United Nations Foundation, numerous human health problems also owe  their origin to hormone disrupting chemicals. They include low sperm  count and increased testicular and prostate cancers among men, and  increased rates of breast cancer, endometriosis and tubal pregnancies in  women. "What we’re talking about is an overall low-dose exposure and a  cumulative effect," says Holly Lucille, author of Creating and Maintaining Balance: A Woman’s Guide to Safe, Natural Hormone Health.
 
0 comments:
Post a Comment