New study suggests that women eating PCB contaminated fish are
less likely to give birth to boys
New research published in the open access journal, Environmental Health: a
Global Access Science Source suggests that women exposed to polychlorinated
biphenyls are less likely to give birth to boys. The results come from a study
of mothers and fathers around the Great Lakes region of the United States who
have eaten large quantities of contaminated fish. These findings add to a
growing body of evidence suggesting that environmental pollution may be
responsible for changes in the proportion of male births around the world.
Contamination of the Great Lakes with polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) has
led to the concentration of these chemicals in the fatty tissue of fish,
particularly large predator species favoured by sport fishermen. PCBs are
man-made chemicals, used until the late 1970's as coolants and lubricants.
Manufacture of PCBs was stopped in the US over twenty years ago because of
concerns about contamination in the environment and effects on health. Eating
fish from the Great Lakes has been associated with a reduction in the birth
weight of babies, a shortened menstrual cycle, reduced fertility, and neurologic
disorders.
For much of the twentieth century the global proportion of male births has
been declining. Some animal studies suggest that exposure to PCBs may lower the
proportion of male offspring produced by a mother. However human studies have
yet to show any conclusive effect of PCBs. In an attempt to examine the effects
of PCB consumption on the gender of newborns, Marc Weisskopf from the Harvard
School of Public Health and Henry Anderson and Lawrence Hanrahan from the
Wisconsin Department of Health and Family Services investigated the PCB levels
in the blood of parents from the Great Lakes region.
The researchers interviewed sport fishing charter boat captains to identify
those that had eaten large quantities of potentially contaminated fish. Randomly
selected members of the community who lived in a similar geographic area and
were of a similar age as the charter boat captains were also contacted to
identify individuals with very low consumption of fish caught in the Great Lakes
by sport fisherman. Blood samples were taken from charter boat captains and
their spouses who reported the highest levels of fish consumption and selected
members of the community. Comparing the levels of PCBs found in the blood
samples of their volunteers with the gender of their children allowed the
research team to establish the effects of PCB consumption on the chances of
conceiving a boy or a girl.
The results show a clear connection between high levels of PCBs in the blood
of women and a reduction in their chance of conceiving a boy. The research team
conclude, "Our data suggest that maternal exposure to PCBs before pregnancy, in
this case primarily through consumption of contaminated fish from the Great
Lakes, is associated with a decrease in the sex ratio of offspring. There was
some suggestion in our data that some levels of paternal exposure to PCBs may
increase the sex ratio, but these results were weak and not consistent."
The results of this study add to an increasing body of evidence that chemical
pollutants can have effects on the chances of giving birth to a boy or a girl.
However caution is needed when interpreting the results of this study as blood
samples were taken some time after conception.
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This article in freely available online in keeping with Environmental Health:
A Global Access Science Source's policy of open access to research articles.
Please publish the URL in any news report so that your readers are able to read
the original paper.
http://www.ehjournal.net/content/2/1/2
For further information about this research, contact the corresponding
author:
Marc G. Weisskopf
Harvard School of Public Health
Dept. of Environmental Health
Occupational Health Program
655 Huntington Ave.
Boston MA 02115
Phone: 617-384-8872
Fax: 617-384-8994 mweissko@hsph.harvard.edu
Environmental Health: A Global Access Science Source is published by
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