Pesticide and Environmental Update
Pregnant
Women Contaminated by Pesticides
Human beings are directly responsible for more than 110,000 chemical
substances which have been generated since the Industrial Revolution.
Every year, we “invent” more than 2,000 new substances, most of them
contaminants, which are emitted into the environment and which are
consequently present in food, air, soil and water. Nonetheless, human
beings are also victims of these emissions, and involuntarily (what is
known in this scientific field as “inadvertent exposure”), every day
humans ingest many of these substances which cannot be assimilated by our
body, and are accumulated in the fatty parts of our tissues.
This is especially worrying for pregnant women. During the gestation
period, all the contaminants accumulated in the organism have direct
access to the microenvironment where the embryo/foetus develops. The
doctoral thesis “Maternal-child exposure via the placenta to
environmental chemical substances with hormonal activity”, written by
María José López Espinosa, from the Department of Radiology and
Physical Medicine of the University of Granada, analyzes the presence of
organochlorine pesticides –normally used as pesticides- in the organisms
of pregnant women. The analysis was developed at San Cecilio University
Hospital , in Granada, with 308 women who had given birth to healthy
children between 2000 and 2002. The results are alarming: 100% of these
pregnant women had at least one pesticide in their placenta, but the
average rate amounts to eight different kinds of chemical substances.
Fifteen different pesticides in the organisms of pregnant women
In her study, through the analysis of the placentas, López studied the
presence of 17 endocrine disruptive organochlorine pesticides (i.e.,
pesticides which interfere with the proper performance of the hormonal
system). The results showed that the most frequent pesticides present in
the placenta tissue are DDE (92.7%), lindane (74.8%), endosulfan diol
(62.1%) y endosulfan-I (54.2%). Among these, the most prevalent was
endosulfan-diol, with an average concentration of 4.15 nanograms per gram
of placenta (156.73 ng/g lipid). Surprisingly, the UGR researcher
discovered that some patients’ placentas contained 15 of the 17
pesticides analyzed.
A total of 668 samples from pregnant women were used in this study,
which was approved by the Ethical Commission of San Cecilio University
Hospital . Mothers were informed of the study’s goals before giving
their express consent.
Thanks to gynaecologists, the nurses and the midwives who participated
in the study, biological samples were extracted from the blood, the
umbilical cord and the placenta during childbirth. The following day, an
epidemiological survey was carried out by trained survey statisticians.
The survey contained questions on the general data of the parents, their
places of residence, profession, medical history, anthropometric
information, age, tobacco habits, lifestyle and diet during pregnancy,
among other factors.
The study made at the UGR has facilitated research into the association
of the characteristics of parents, newborn babies and childbirth with
exposure to pesticides found in the mothers’ placenta. Among the aspects
associated with a higher presence of pesticides we find an older age,
higher body mass index, less weight gained during pregnancy, lower
educational level, higher workplace exposure, first-time motherhood and
lower weight in babies.
“Serious effects on the baby”
According to María José López, “we do not really know the
consequences of exposure to disruptive pesticides in children, but we can
predict that they may have serious effects, since this placenta exposure
occurs at key moments of the embryo’s development”. The research group
to which María José López belongs, directed by Prof. Nicolás Olea
Serrano, has conducted several studies which associate exposure to
pesticides with neonatal malformations if the genito-urinary system, such
as cryptorchidism (undropped testicles) and hypospadias (total fusion of
the urethral folds).
The UGR researcher underlines the fact that, in spite of “inadvertent
exposure”, “it is possible to control pesticide ingestion by means of
a proper diet, which should be healthy and balanced, through consumption
of food whose chemical content is low. Moreover, daily exercise and the
avoidance of tobacco (which could also be a source of inadvertent
exposure) are very important habits which help to control the presence of
pesticides in our organisms.
The UGR researcher’s work is framed within the objectives established
in the research project ”Increasing incidence of human male reproductive
health disorders in relation to environmental effects on growth-and sex
steroid-induced alterations in programmed development” (Environmental
Reproductive Health), directed and carried out by a multidisciplinary
group of clinicians, basic researchers and epidemiologists at several
institutions from countries such as Denmark, Finland or England and
financed by the European Union (QLK4-1999-01422).
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