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Growing Impact of Chemical Toxicity Generations Later

POSTED BY: OONJERAH
UPDATED: Tuesday, June 5, 2012 13:56
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Tuesday, June 5, 2012 10:59 AM

OONJERAH



WWII Chemical Exposure May Pass Down Disease, Study Finds (21 May 2012) =>
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-05-21/wwii-chemical-exposure-may-pa
ss-down-disease-study-finds.html


The World War II generation may have passed down to their grandchildren the
effects of chemical exposure in the 1940s, possibly explaining current rates of
obesity, autism and mental illness, according to one researcher.

David Crews, professor of psychology and zoology at the University of Texas at
Austin, theorized that the rise in these diseases may be linked to environmental
effects passed on through generations. His research showed that descendants of
rats exposed to a crop fungicide were less sociable, more obese and more anxious
than offspring of the unexposed.

The results, published today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
are part of a growing field of study that suggests environmental damage to cells can
cause inherited changes and susceptibility to disease. Crews said his findings are
applicable to humans.

“This, I think, is the first causal demonstration that environmental contamination
may be the root cause of the great increase in obesity and the great increase in
mental disorders,”
Crews said in a telephone interview. “It’s as if the exposure
three generations before has reprogrammed the brain so it responds in a different
way to a life challenge.”

In the study, a group of rats were exposed once to vinclozolin a common fungicide
used to protect fruits and vegetables. This single contact altered how their genes
were activated, and future generations also carried this change, though they never
had been exposed to the chemical, Crews said.

Stress Reactions

When these descendants were then restrained as adolescents, causing stress, their
reactions differed from relatives of unexposed rats. The affected rats also showed
less interest in new companions and spent more time in the corners of an open field
rather than the middle than rats whose ancestors weren’t exposed. Rats related to
the exposed animals that weren’t stressed were obese, Crews said.

Crews tested the reactions of rats three generations after exposure because humans
are that far removed from the debut of new chemicals seven decades ago, he said.
During the 1940s, powerful agricultural chemicals including DDT, the first synthetic
pesticide, and new types of plastics were introduced.

“The chemical revolution started in the 1940s, with World War II and the development
of organic chemistry, plastics, detergents, fertilizers,” Crews said.

Andrew Feinberg, director of Johns Hopkins University’s Epigenetics Center in Baltimore,
said Crew’s theory may be premature, after reading the paper.

Evidence ‘Not Clear’

“We should be very careful about overstating what looks like basic science with public
health implications,” Feinberg said in an interview. “Currently we don’t have enough
evidence showing that these fungicides are causing common human disease through
an epigenetic mechanism. It’s research that’s well worth doing, but it’s clear that that
hasn’t been shown.”

Other studies in epigenetics, a field that investigates the inheritance of cellular changes
outside the realm of DNA, have shown chemical exposure can affect fertility. A project
by researchers at Washington State University published in PLoS One in February found
that when pregnant rats are injected with common environmental toxins, such as chem-
icals used in insect repellents, plastics and jet fuel, offspring for three generations have
reproductive problems.

Japanese scientists are studying whether descendants of atomic bomb survivors have in-
herited epigenetic changes that make them more susceptible to cancer and heart disease.

“Diseases like autism, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder are not single gene, or even a few
genes, they’re complex of genes,” Crews said. “It also turns out a lot of these genes that
we have identified are epigenetically modified.”


Oonj: I've been sitting on this story for a while . . . am loathe to create new threads.
The older we are, the more perspective we have on these trends. I don't know if mental
illness rates are higher; autism AND birth defects are much higher I've been told.
Obesity? That one is obvious, incredible; I see it whenever I go out in public.

In the 40's, if something was Great, like aspirin or penicillin, it was applied with very
little caution. That I remember well.

In addition, common sense appears to be in decline: being forgotten like an ancient art.




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Tuesday, June 5, 2012 11:41 AM

CHRISISALL


Quote:

Originally posted by Oonjerah:
In addition, common sense appears to be in decline: being forgotten like an ancient art.

I'll do a focus group on that & tell you how it tracks...

You must have some common (now: uncommon) sense, otherwise you'd not see the widespread lack.

The study regarding passed on gene s**t from the first synthetic garbage in our environment rings true IMO.

Chrisisall, wearing a frilly Mal thing on his head, and ready to shoot unarmed, full-body armoured Operatives

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Tuesday, June 5, 2012 12:26 PM

FREMDFIRMA



Oh and that's not all, folks...

The Ethyl-Poisoned Earth
http://www.damninteresting.com/the-ethyl-poisoned-earth/

Also ironic is the big blowout brawl I had over MBTE with would-be environmentalists on another forum.
They of course dismissed and ignored every bloody thing I said, in hopes of reducing airborne pollutants from exhaust emissions...
Worked out real well, didn't it ?

-F

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Tuesday, June 5, 2012 1:56 PM

RIONAEIRE

Beir bua agus beannacht


That's a really interesting article and an interesting theory, it would explain some things, maybe its more than personal environmental exposure and crappy genetics getting crappier as people make babies who grow up and make more babies.

I assume you're my pal until you let me know otherwise.

"A completely coherant River means writers don't deliver" KatTaya.

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