Title: PCB Exposure and Human Health
1PCB Exposure and Human Health
- David O. Carpenter, MD
- Institute for Health and the Environment
- University at Albany
2What are PCBs?
- PCBs are man made oils that were used for many
years to fill electrical capacitors, as hydraulic
fluids, as solvents in paints and window caulking
and for many other useful purposes. They are
actually a mixture of 209 different chemicals
with similar structures. - Because of their chemical structure, they are
very persistent, both in the environment and in
the human body.
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4CHARACTERISTICS OF PCBs
? Very stable and persistent in animals and in
the environment. ? Tend to bio-accumulate in the
food chain, especially in fat. ? Lower
chlorinated PCBs are more volatile and water
soluble. ? Even the polar regions of the earth
are highly contaminated with PCBs via atmospheric
transport.
5PCBs in the Environment
- Because PCBs are an oil, they are found primarily
in fat. This is why they bioaccumulate in the
food chain from contaminated rivers. - In rivers, the PCBs tend to be in the sediments,
then move into the worms that eat the sediments,
and then into the fish and other wildlife that
eat the worms and the fish. Finally they end up
in people who eat the fish, waterfowl or animals.
6How can we be exposed to PCBs?
- There are three routes of exposure to PCBs. One
can eat or drink them, breathe them in from the
air or absorb them through the skin. - Eating or drinking PCBs is probably the most
important route of exposure, but breathing in
PCBs in very important in certain circumstances.
You can also absorb them through the skin if you
go barefoot in contaminated sediment. Since they
are fat-soluble, they pass right through the skin.
7Air Transport of PCBs
- The polar regions of the earth have high
concentrations of PCBs even though there are few
local sources. This is because of air currents
that transport to cold regions, where the PCBs
come out of the vapor phase and get into fish and
animals. - Recent studies show PCBs in the air near
contaminated sites, and resultant exposure to
local residents. - PCBs in indoor environments are even more serious
routes of exposure by breathing the air.
8What level of PCBs is safe?
- We all have PCBs in our bodies because they are
in all of the animal fats in our diet. ATSDR
says that the average adult has between 0.9 and
1.5 parts per billion (ppb) in our blood. - There is no safe level of PCBs. All our
research indicates that more is worse, but that
even the level now commonly found in the average
person increases risk of disease. - This is why it is so important to reduce our PCB
exposure to the greatest degree possible without
excessive disruption of life style.
9How Long do PCBs Stay in Our Bodies?
- The half-life of PCBs in the human body (how long
it takes to get rid of 50) varies with PCB
structure. - Those PCBs with few chlorines stay in the body
only days to weeks, and are broken down in the
liver. - Those PCBs with more chlorines stay in the body
for decades, since they are much more difficult
to break down. - How dangerous the PCBs are is not necessarily
related to how long they stay in the body, but
one can get information about exposure by
measurement of the levels of PCBs in blood.
10Diseases of Concern
- Cancer
- Immune Suppression ? increased infectious
disease, increased cancer - Hypothyroidism ? overweight, tired, lacking
energy - Diabetes
- Neurobehavioral effects ? reduced IQ, antisocial
behavior, poor memory, increased mental
illness - Cardiovascular disease ? heart attacks,
hypertension, high serum lipids - Disruption of sex steroid system ? infertility,
birth defects of reproductive organs, early
menarche, endometriosis - Developmental abnormalities ? low birth weight,
birth defects
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12PCBs Cause a Decrease in IQ.
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14We studied over 1,000 individuals for
- Congener specific PCBs (101 congeners).
- Three pesticides (DDE, HCB, mirex).
- Lead and mercury levels in adolescents.
- Serum lipids, fasting glucose, thyroid hormones,
testosterone, estrogen. - Medication use and medical diagnoses.
15We Gave Adolescents Four IQ Tests
- We found that the higher the PCB level in the
blood, the less well the adolescents did on each
of these four tests.
16 Correlations between PCBs and Cognitive
Variables in Mohawk adolescents.(Controlling
for confounding variables)Coefficients with
are statistically significant (plt.05) all others
listed are significant at (plt.1).
17What About Adults?
- We tested about 350 adults with memory and IQ
tests. - Individuals with higher blood PCB levels did not
do as well on these tests as those people with
lower levels.
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19- PCBs look very similar to thyroid hormone, the
natural hormone that drives our metabolism and
makes energy. - Because of this, PCBs interfere with thyroid
function.
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22Risk of Hypothyroidism in Mohawk Adults in
Relation to PCB and Pesticide Exposures
- Toxicant OR (95 CI)
- Most PCBs 4.46 (1.47-13.54)
- Estro NP 0.29 (0.11-0.74)
- DDE1 0.83 (0.35-1.98)
- DDE2 3.79 (1.39-10.31)
- Mirex 0.84 (0.42-1.69)
- HCB 0.17 (0.07-0.42)
23PCBs and Sex Hormones
- PCBs can act like the female sex hormone,
estrogen. This may change the age at which a
young girl reaches puberty. - PCBs also can alter levels of the male sex
hormone, testosterone.
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25 Testosterone levels in men in
relation to PCBs
26PCBs and Heart Disease
- PCBs can increase the risk of a heart attack in
several different ways they can cause an
increase in the levels of fat in the blood, they
can damage the walls of blood vessels and they
can cause high blood pressure.
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29PCBs and Diabetes
- New evidence shows that people with high PCBs are
more likely to have diabetes.
30NHANES, Lee et al.
- Data from 2 dioxins, one PCB and three
pesticides. (Diabetes Care 29 1638 2006) - When risk of diabetes was classified according to
the sum of all six POPs, adjusted ORs were 1.0,
14.0, 14.7, and 38.3. - Later (Diabetes Care 30 1596 2007) they
conclude that the relation is strongest for
dioxin-like PCBs and chlorinated pesticides, but
weak for dioxins and non-dioxin-like PCBs.
31Organochlorine Compounds Increase Risks of
Diabetes
32Obesity and Diabetes
- Lee et al. (2006) looked at obese persons (BMI gt
30 kg/m3) in relation to sum of 6 POPs - lt25th 1 of 129 people
- 25th to 50th 14 of 153 people
- 50th to 75th 29 of 176 people
- 75th to 90th 32 of 87 people
- gt90th 31 of 80 people
- Conclusion Obesity does not cause diabetes!
33We have also studied an Alaskan Native population
- We obtained blood samples from over 100 adult
Siberian Yupik people. - There is a waste site on the island, and we have
tested to see whether the people who have hunting
camps near the waste site have higher PCB levels.
- We now are analyzing some of their traditional
foods for PCBs and pesticides.
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35PCB Levels (ppt) in Human Serum
36- These results show that those persons who have
hunting camps near to the PCB waste site have
higher levels of PCBs in their bodies. - However all of the Yupiks have high levels of
PCBs. - The PCBs come from the animal fats they eat. The
PCBs in reindeer were low, but those in the polar
bears were very high. All of the marine mammal
fat contain PCBs. Even the health of the animals
is affected.
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38POLAR BEARS
Survival of cubs reduced to ½ in Norwegian
Arctic. In past 42 of bears live to age 15 now
down to 11. We frequently find hermophroditic
bears never used to.
39Conclusions
- PCBs are dangerous chemicals that cause several
different diseases. - We are exposed to PCBs primarily from the food we
eat, especially animal fats. - Waste sites containing PCBs pose a serious threat
to human health.