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Household Insecticides
Cause Autoimmune Disorders
New research suggests a link between women's exposure to household
insecticides including roach and mosquito killers
and the autoimmune disorders rheumatoid arthritis and lupus.
The scientist did not find a direct cause-and-effect relationship
between insecticide exposure and the illnesses, and it's possible
that the women have something else in common that accounts for
their higher risk. But epidemiologist Christine Parks, lead investigator
of the study, said the findings do raise a red flag.
"It's hard to envision what other factors might explain
this association," said Parks, an epidemiologist with the
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences who was to
present the study over the weekend at the American College of
Rheumatology annual meeting in Philadelphia.
Previous research has linked agricultural pesticides to higher
risk of rheumatoid arthritis and lupus, two diseases in which
the immune system goes haywire and begins to attack the body.
Farmers, among others, appear to be vulnerable.
Parks and her colleagues wanted to find out whether smaller doses
of insecticides, such as those people might encounter at home
from either personal or commercial residential use, might have
a similar effect.
The researchers examined data from a previous study of almost
77,000 postmenopausal women aged 50 to 79. Their findings were
to be released Monday at the American College of Rheumatology's
annual scientific meeting in Philadelphia.
Women who reported applying insecticides or mixing them
about half had a higher risk of developing the two autoimmune
disorders than women who reported no insecticide use. This was
the case whether or not they had lived on a farm. Those who used
or mixed the insecticides the most judged by frequency
or duration had double the risk.
Even so, the risk of developing the diseases remained very low.
Overall, Parks said, about 2% of older adults develop the conditions.
Parks said the insecticides that the women used included insect
killers, such as those designed to eradicate ants, wasps, termites,
mosquitoes and roaches. They didn't include insect repellents.
There are some caveats to the research. For one, it's not clear
exactly what products the women used or when. "Over time,
there have been major changes in what products were available
for home use," Parks said.
And while researchers tried to take into account the influence
of factors like age that may boost a woman's risk of getting autoimmune
diseases, it's possible they missed something that boosted the
risk of illness.
Could gardening, which often entails insecticide use, be a contributing
factor? That's possible. But Parks said a lot of insecticide use
takes place inside the home, not outside in the garden.
For now, she said, the findings indicate the need for "more
research on environmental risk factors and better understanding
of what factors might explain these findings, what chemicals might
be associated with these risks."
She declined to speculate on how insecticides might cause problems
in the body.
"I would recommend that people read the labels and take
precautions to minimize their personal exposure" to insecticides,
she said. "This is the case regardless of whether these results
are implicating a chemical that's on the market now or was before."
Reference
Source 129
October 26, 2009
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