Study Finds Lower Level of Old Toxins but New Trends Are Worrying
By ANDREW C. REVKIN
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broadest study yet of toxic chemicals that Americans absorb in their bodies
showed a continuing decline in the clearest threats, like lead, pesticides and
tobacco residues, but turned up numerous other findings that federal scientists
and other experts called troublesome yesterday.
The study tested blood and urine collected in 1999 and 2000 from more than
2,000 volunteers chosen as a representative slice of the American population. It
determined that almost 8 percent of the roughly 50 million American women ages
16 to 49 had blood levels of mercury exceeding 5.8 parts per billion, the
precautionary standard set by the Environmental Protection Agency.
Federal health officials said the danger level for mercury was 10 times that
high, a level not found in any of the women in the study. But they said the
finding justified a greater effort to find ways to cut women's exposure to
mercury, which at high levels can cause birth defects and other problems. Much
of the mercury exposure is likely to accumulate through eating fish.
It is the second such study by the federal Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, but in examining 116 chemicals it greatly expands on the first
report, published in 2001, which looked for only 27.
Health researchers, environmental campaigners and industry representatives
hailed the report as a vital tool in trying to discern, or rule out, health
effects from chemicals in the environment.
"This allows us to begin connecting the dots," said Dr. Patricia Butterfield,
a researcher and professor of nursing at Montana State University. "We can begin
in the next generation of citizens to understand these issues and make
science-based decisions."
The study, the Second National Report on Human Exposure to Environmental
Chemicals, was posted at www.cdc.gov/exposurereport yesterday.
Because the study measured exposures by age, sex and ethnic background, it
could help public health officials focus their priorities, officials and experts
said. For example, it found that all other population groups, including
children, had blood levels of mercury well below the government safety limit.
Future surveys will be published every two years.
Among other findings, the new study disclosed that children had higher levels
of residues from secondhand smoke, some pesticides and plastics than adults, and
that Mexican-Americans have three times the levels of a DDT residue of other
Americans.
The children's higher levels of residues could be a result of several
factors, federal scientists said. For one, children eat, drink and breathe three
times as much as adults pound for pound.
More work should be done to understand the DDT levels in Mexican Americans,
scientists from the disease control agency said. The pesticide has long been
banned in the United States and since 1997 has been phased out in Mexico. The
study did not differentiate between native-born Americans of Mexican descent and
Mexican immigrants.
The study used new methods able to detect the slightest traces of chemicals
in the blood and urine. Tests were run to check for dozens of constituents or
breakdown products of pesticides and plastics as well as long-lived compounds
that are now largely banned but persist in the environment.
Already, federal officials said, the smaller 2001 survey has borne fruit.
They cited a recent investigation of a cluster of childhood leukemia cases in
Fallon, Nev. Investigators sifted for clues to any link to 132 chemicals, said
Dr. James L. Pirkle, the deputy director for science at the federal laboratories
that conducts the studies. A significant finding was that levels of tungsten, a
toxic metal, were higher locally than in the 2001 general overview of the
population. Now the researchers can try to determine whether tungsten levels can
be linked to the leukemia, he said.
The new study echoed the 2001 study's findings on DDT; tobacco residue,
called cotinine; lead; and other toxic compounds that have been measured for
many years. All concentrations have continued to drop in all age and ethnic
groups, according to the new study.
Cotinine is a compound left behind after the body breaks down cigarette smoke
and is used as an indicator of exposure to a host of other cigarette ingredients
that can cause cancer and other diseases.
The new study found that children had more than double the level of cotinine
found in nonsmoking adults. The researchers said this was probably because most
efforts to curtail smoke exposure had occurred in workplaces and public spaces,
not the home.
Environmental and chemical industry groups had different reactions to the
report yesterday.
Environmental campaigners highlighted the need for more work to reduce
chemical releases into the environment and more research on risks.
Industry groups said the data showed the robustness of humans, whose
longevity and health have been steadily improving even with trace exposures like
those measured in the new research.
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