Four chemicals present both inside and
outside homes might disrupt our endocrine systems at levels considered safe by
the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, according to an analysis released today.
The chemicals – benzene, toluene,
ethylbenzene and xylene – are ubiquitous: in the air outside and in many
products inside homes and businesses. They have been linked to reproductive,
respiratory and heart problems, as well as smaller babies.
Now researchers from
The Endocrine Disruption Exchange (TEDX) and the University of Colorado,
Boulder, say that such health impacts may be due to the chemicals’ ability to
interfere with people’s hormones at low exposure levels.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Kenyon Industries on Route Two in Shannock used to be one of Rhode Island's top ten sources for toluene pollution, releasing just under 8,000 pounds into the air. But according to EPA, no discharges are being reported. Not known - whether the change since 2011 has to do with reductions in discharges or EPA raising the reporting threshold.
Bolden and colleagues – including
scientist, activist, author and TEDX founder Theo Colborn who passed away last
December – pored over more than 40 studies on the health impacts of low exposure
to the chemicals. (Colborn also co-authored "Our Stolen Future" along
with Dianne Dumanoski and Pete Myers, founder of Environmental Health News and
chief scientist at Environmental Health Sciences.)
They looked at exposures lower than the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s reference concentrations for the
chemicals, which is the agency’s estimated inhalation exposure level that is
not likely to cause health impacts during a person’s lifetime.
Many of the health problems – asthma,
low birth weights, cardiovascular, disease, preterm births, abnormal sperm –
can be rooted in early disruptions to the developing endocrine system, Bolden
said.
The analysis doesn’t prove that exposure
to low levels of the chemicals disrupt hormones. However, any potential
problems with developing hormone systems are cause for concern.
“Hormones are how the body communicates
with itself to get work done. Interrupt that, you can expect all sorts of
negative health outcomes,” said Susan Nagel an associate professor at the
University of Missouri-Columbia Obstetrics, Gynecology and Women's Health
School of Medicine who was not involved in the study.
Cathy
Milbourn, a spokesperson for the EPA, said in an emailed response that the
agency will "review the study and incorporate the findings into our work
as appropriate."
The "EPA is screening thousands of
chemicals for potential risk of endocrine disruption," she said. "As
potential risk of endocrine disruption is identified, these chemicals are
assessed further."
The four chemicals are retrieved from
the wellheads during crude oil and natural gas extraction and, after refining,
are used as gasoline additives and in a wide variety of consumer products such
as adhesives, detergents, degreasers, dyes, pesticides, polishes and solvents.
Ethylbenzene is one of the top ten
chemicals used in children’s products such as toys and playground equipment,
according to a 2013 EPA report.
Toluene is in the top ten chemicals used in consumer products such as fuels and
paints, the report found.
All four get into indoor and outdoor air
via fossil fuel burning, vehicle emissions and by volatizing from products.
Bolden said studies that measure the air in and around homes and businesses
find the chemicals 90 to 95 percent of the time.
Katie Brown, spokeswoman for Energy in
Depth, a program of the Independent Petroleum Association of America, said in
an email that the study suggests “products deemed safe by the U.S. Consumer
Product Safety Commission are more dangerous than oil and gas development.
“Contrary
to their intentions, what this report actually shows is that people should be
no more afraid of oil and gas development than products in their home,” she
said.
The Consumer Specialty Products Association,
a trade group that represents companies that manufacturer consumer goods
including cleaning products, pesticides, polishes, would not comment on the
study but a spokesperson said that member groups typically don’t use the
chemicals mentioned.
In several of the monitoring studies
Bolden and colleagues examined, levels of the chemicals were higher in indoor
air than in outdoor air, suggesting that people might be exposed within their
homes.
“A lot of time indoor air is poorly
circulated,” Bolden said.
Nagel cited a “huge need” to look at the
impact of exposure to ambient levels of these chemicals. The study highlights
“a whole lot we don’t know” about how these compounds may impact humans, she
said.
Using human tissue cells, Nagel’s lab
has previously shown that the chemicals can disrupt the androgen and estrogen
hormones.
The authors said regulators should give
air contaminants the same attention they’ve given greenhouse gas emissions
recently.
“Tremendous efforts have led to the
development of successful regulations focused on controlling greenhouse gases
in an attempt to reduce global temperatures,” the authors wrote in the study
published today in Environmental Science and Technology journal.
“Similar efforts need to be directed
toward compounds that cause poor air quality both indoors and outdoors.”
For questions or feedback about this piece, contact Brian Bienkowski at bbienkowski@ehn.org.