By MARLA CONE, Times Environmental Writer
Children exposed to pesticides in the womb or at an
early age may suffer permanent brain defects that could change their lives by
altering their behavior and their ability to do everything from drawing a
picture to catching a ball, according to new scientific research.
Widely used pest-killing chemicals, in amounts
routinely found in the environment in farm areas, seem to be capable of skewing
thyroid hormones, which control how the brain of a fetus or young child
develops, according to a study published today.
Scientists say the study and other recent research support an
emerging
theory that pesticides may exact a toll on the intelligence, motor skills and
personalities of infants, toddlers and preschoolers.
"Data suggest that we may be raising
a generation of children with learning disabilities and hyper-aggression,"
said Wayne Porter, a University of Wisconsin professor of zoology and
environmental toxicology.
Porter's study, published
today in the journal Toxicology and Industrial Health, shows that a common mix
of insecticide, herbicide and fertilizer found in drinking water altered the
thyroid hormones of young mice. It also changed their aggressiveness--measured
by attacks on other mice--and suppressed their immune systems.
Although a study of mice alone is not overly
compelling, the theory is bolstered by recent research on human beings.
In tests in the state of Sonora,
Mexico, scientists found striking differences in hand-eye coordination and other
mental and physical skills when comparing Yaqui Indian preschoolers in an
agrarian region with those in adjacent foothills where no pesticides are used.
Four- and 5-year-olds living in the farm valley had
trouble performing a variety of simple motor skills--drawing stick figures,
catching a 12-inch ball from almost four yards away and a tennis ball from more
than a yard away, and dropping raisins into a bottle cap from a distance of six
inches.
They also had poorer memory skills and
stamina, were more prone to physical aggression and angry outbursts, and were
less sociable and creative while playing. Farm and household pest-killers are
widely used there, and high levels of multiple pesticides have been found in the
cord blood of newborns and the breast milk of mothers in the area.
Another study, in rural western Minnesota, found
increased birth defects in children conceived during the spring growing season.
Most of the new research detects problems in
agricultural communities--places found not just in rural regions but also in
more urbanized areas, including Southern California. No one knows yet what it
might mean for people who consume small traces of the chemicals in their food.
Earlier this month, Consumers Union reported that many fruits and vegetables
contain concentrations of pesticides that may be unhealthful for children.
The new hormone studies add to a growing body of
research from around the world suggesting that dozens of commonly used
pesticides and other chemicals mimic the hormones that control sexual and
neurological development.
Called endocrine
disruption, this is arguably the most controversial environmental issue of the
past decade.
From alligators in Florida to polar
bears in the Arctic, wild animals in pollution hot spots have been feminized by
hormone-disrupting chemicals that imitate estrogen or block testosterone,
scientists say.
But the impact on human beings--who
generally are exposed to much lower levels of pollution--is more controversial
and uncertain.
In addition to the
possible neurological effects, some researchers theorize that the hormone
disrupters could be reducing men's sperm counts or increasing diseases of the
reproductive system.
Pesticide company
representatives--and some toxicologists and other scientists--remain skeptical
that commonly found levels of pesticides can alter human thyroid and sex
hormones.
"I'm kind of dubious that low-level
exposures to chemicals are raising all kinds of havoc with the endocrine
system," said John McCarthy, vice president of a group representing pesticide
manufacturers, the American Crop Protection Assn. "The human system has so many
protective mechanisms, and our bodies are bombarded with all kinds of things."
Still, he said, the industry is highly concerned
about the findings suggesting neurological damage, and would like to see a
comprehensive review to evaluate all existing studies and figure out what they
collectively show.
"We ought to be taking a very
hard look at it," McCarthy said. "There's almost a study a week of one type or
another, and it's hard to see how it all fits together. We have to take some
time to say, 'OK, what does this all mean? Is this something that should require
some abrupt change [in pesticides] or fine-tuning or more research?' "
No one knows how many pesticides out of 77,000 used
in the United States might alter sex or thyroid hormones.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency requires
tests that screen pesticides for cancer and birth defects--but not for hormone
effects. A committee last year devised new testing requirements--supported by
the pesticide industry--that are expected to take effect in 2001.
It has long been suspected that various
environmental pollutants can damage brain development. Industrial compounds
called PCBs have been linked to learning disabilities in children of women who
ate contaminated Great Lakes fish.
The link to
pesticides is far from definitive, however, and big gaps in knowledge remain.
Questions abound: How do the contaminants disrupt thyroid levels? What does that
physically do to the brain? What dose of exposure does it take? Does the human
body have some defense mechanism to fend off low levels of hormones? What do
mixes of various man-made and natural hormones do to people?
Some scientists suspect that the damage is passed
from a mother to her unborn child early in the first trimester, before most
women even know they are pregnant.
Thyroid hormones
guide the nerve cells that dictate how the brain of a fetus develops and the
number of brain cells created. One theory is that if a mother receives a dose of
pesticides during this critical phase, it can interfere with her thyroid
levels--sometimes raising them, sometimes lowering them--irreversibly altering
the child's nervous system.
How the child's brain
circuitry develops determines his or her hand-eye coordination, motor skills and
learning ability.
Thyroid hormones also can change
behavior--an excess can make people quick to anger, while a low count could have
the opposite effect. The hormones also can alter steroids that control
aggression and immune systems.
"Thyroid hormones
are important to brain development, and that's been known for a long time," said
Dr. Harley Kornblum, a pediatric neurologist at the UCLA Medical Center. But, he
and other neurologists say, it's debatable how important the mother's thyroid
level is to the fetus, and it's even more uncertain what role environmental
contaminants may play.
Porter said children up to
age 8 who have developing brains and immune systems are "especially vulnerable"
to changes in thyroid hormones.
Some symptoms of
children exposed to pesticides are similar to attention deficit hyperactivity
disorders, which have been increasingly diagnosed in American children. Some
medical research supports a link between thyroid hormones and those disorders,
but the connection, especially with pesticides, remains unclear.
The implication for adults, and whether pesticides
might cause thyroid disorders, also is unknown.
In
the study of 50 Mexican children, the scientists, led by anthropologist
Elizabeth Guillette of the University of Arizona, said genetic and social
factors--including income, education and health services--are so similar between
the farm valley and the foothills that they cannot explain the differences in
the youngsters' cognitive ability.
"These children
share similar genetic background, diets, water mineral contents, cultural
patterns and social behaviors. The major difference was their exposure to
pesticides," Guillette and Mexican researchers said in a report published in
June in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives.
Most of the stick-figure drawings by the 4- and
5-year-olds in the farm valley were unrecognizable as human beings--they look
like the scribbles of a 2-year-old. In contrast, drawings by the foothill
children had heads, eyes, torsos, arms and legs.
Experts say that the inability to draw a person indicates a breakdown between
the brain's ability to process visual information and its ability to control
fine muscles.
"Some valley mothers stressed their
own frustration in trying to teach their child how to draw. In addition, two
valley children drew pictures composed of boxes, arches and lines, claiming
these pictures were people," the researchers reported.
Other tests pointed to recollection and stamina
problems. One foothill child could jump for 336 seconds--over three times longer
than the best-performing valley child.
Some
scientists remain dubious of the results because the tests on the children were
unusual, and are intrinsically subjective and difficult to interpret.
Dr. Richard Jackson, director of the National
Center for Environmental Health at the federal Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, said his staff was "unimpressed by the scientific rigor" of the work
in the report.
McCarthy said that although the
differences between the two populations of children seem striking, other hidden
factors, rather than pesticide exposure, cannot be ruled out.
Other studies, meanwhile, show that pesticide
exposure during the first trimester of pregnancy increases birth defects.
The University of Minnesota and the federal EPA in
a 1996 study found a high rate of birth defects in the children of Minnesotans
who work as pesticide appliers as well as the general population of western
Minnesota, a major farm region with heavy pesticide use.
The defect rate was the highest among babies born
nine months after the spring season, indicating that the risk rises for children
conceived during the time when pesticide use increases.
In Porter's 5-year study of mice, the animals drank
water containing a mixture of two pesticides--aldicarb and atrazine--and
nitrates from fertilizer.
The concentrations
ingested by the mice were similar to those found in ground water in many
agricultural areas, Porter said. Aldicarb, atrazine and nitrates are the three
most abundant agricultural contaminants in the United States, although they do
not rank high in use in California.
While the mix
of the three chemicals altered the mice hormones, each one alone did not. That
points out a gaping hole in the federal effort to protect consumers--the EPA
only tests for effects of pesticides individually, not cumulatively.
The EPA tests, Porter said, "generate a great deal
of false confidence in the safety" of pesticides.
* * *
Drawing an Unsettling Picture
Scientists say children may suffer permanent brain
defects from pesticide exposure. In Sonora, Mexico, a study found that Yaqui
Indian preschoolers in a farming region exhibited poor motor skills compared
with their counterparts in adjacent foothills where no pesticides are used. When
asked to draw a person, the farm valley's 4-and 5-year-olds mostly drew
meaningless circles and lines.
Source: Environmental Health Perspectives, June 1998.
Copyright 1999 Los Angeles Times. All Rights Reserved
Published Monday, March 15, 1999, in the Los Angeles Times.
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