Title: Endocrine Disruption
1Endocrine Disruption
- Faith M. Oi
- University of Florida
- Entomology and Nematology Dept.
- Gainesville, FL 32611
- foi_at_ufl.edu
2The Concerns
- Endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) have been
implicated in everything from alligator
feminization to human infertility, cancer and
recently obesity. - EPA is beginning Tier 1 screening
- Tier 2 concentrates on doses
- Documentation has been and will continue to be
difficult and controversial
3EDC Brief History
- 1930s, observations that synthetic chemicals
could mimic hormones - 1991, Wingspread
- Chemically induced alternations in sexual
development The wildlife/human connection
4EDC Brief History
- Many compounds introduced into the environment
by human activity are capable of disrupting the
endocrine system of animals, including fish,
wildlife, and humans. Endocrine disruption can
be profound because of the crucial role hormones
play in controlling development.
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7The Endocrine Disruption Screening Program
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10Investigations into the Effects of EDCs
- Sperm qualityseveral studies report decline
- Fertilityimplication, exposure to high levels
can impair fertility and increase rate of
miscarriage - Abnormalities in male sex organs
- Precocious puberty
- Association with certain cancers
- Testicular cancer increase from 1973 to 1999
across all age groups - Caucasian 51.8
- African-American 49.4
- Breast cancer increase
- Caucasian 27.9
- African-American 34.8
- Brain cancer increase in children 14 or younger
- 50.2
11Routes of Exposure
- Oral-- ingestion
- Dermal-- skin contamination (60-90)
- Inhalation-- breath airborne insecticides (lt1)
- Ocular-- eyes
12Acute Toxicity
- Definition Ability of a chemical to do systemic
damage resulting from a single exposure to a
relatively large dose - Effects are usually seen within minutes to hours
of exposure
13How Does the LD50 Work?The Concept
- Acute toxicity is measured by the LD50
- LD50 (Lethal Dose) Dose that it takes to kill
50 of the test population
Who invented the concept of the LD50? J. W.
Trevan, 1927. Was trying to estimate relative
poisoning effects of drugs and medicines.
14- Some chemicals mimic a natural hormone, fooling
the body into over-responding to the stimulus
(e.g., a growth hormone that results in increased
muscle mass), or responding at inappropriate
times (e.g., producing insulin when it is not
needed). - block the effects of a hormone from certain
receptors (e.g. growth hormones required for
normal development). - directly stimulate or inhibit the endocrine
system and cause overproduction or
underproduction of hormones - Epa.gov
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16Endocrine DisruptionThe Readers Digest Version
- Endocrine system secretes hormones into the blood
stream and works in conjunction with the nervous
system - EDCs mimic hormones and interfere with synthesis,
secretion, transport, binding, action or
elimination of natural hormones. - EDCs are bad for adults, worse for children and
worst for unborn children of parents who are
exposed
17Endocrine DisruptionThe Readers Digest Version
- Hypothalamus - The hypothalamus links our
endocrine and nervous systems together. The
hypothalamus drives the endocrine system. - Pituitary gland - The pituitary gland receives
signals from the hypothalamus. The posterior lobe
secretes hormones that are made by the
hypothalamus. The anterior lobe produces its own
hormones, several of which act on other endocrine
glands.
18Endocrine DisruptionThe Readers Digest Version
- Pancreas - The pancreas is responsible for
producing glucagon and insulin. Both hormones
help regulate the concentration of glucose
(sugar) in the blood. - Gonads - produce steroids that affect growth and
development and also regulate reproductive cycles
and behaviors. The major categories of gonadal
steroids are androgens, estrogens, and
progestins, all of which are found in both males
and females but at different levels.
19Endocrine DisruptionThe Readers Digest Version
- Children are not little adults
- Pound for pound, a childs exposure is greater
than an adults (dose-response) - Immature blood-brain barrierallows more chemical
passage - Detoxication systems may not be fully
functionaltiming of exposure.
20Endocrine DisruptionThe Readers Digest Version
- Because children have more future years of life
than most adults, they have more time to develop
chronic diseases that may be triggered by early
exposures. - Landrigan et al. 2003. Assessing the effects of
endocrine disruptors in the national childrens
study. Environ. Health Perspectives 111(13)
1678-1682.
21Solution?
Err on the side of caution
IPM! Or Green???