Part 1 of 4. Phthalates as Endocrine Disruptors in the
Environment
Reproductive, Endocrine, Immune, Genotoxic, and Nephrotoxic Damages in Wildlife
Reproductive, Endocrine, Immune, Genotoxic, and Nephrotoxic Damages in Wildlife
In recent years, the safety of phthalates as potentially
powerful endocrine disruptors has been hotly debated worldwide by scientists,
government regulators, and consumer advocates.
Phthalates are found in our drinking water, air, and food
all over the world. Phthalates are a major environmental pollutant and a cause
for concern because they are found in most people's blood, tissue, breast milk,
and urine.
The European Union banned phthalates in soft PVC toys and
childcare products in 1999 through its Commission Decision 1999/815/EC.
In 2004, the EU banned phthalates in cosmetics and other
beauty products. No such bans are in effect in the United States and elsewhere
outside European Union. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) stated that
there is no clear evidence of harm from phthalates in cosmetics and other
products.
Researchers estimated that more than 75% of the U.S.
population is exposed to phthalates. Starting as early as the 1950s, scientists
have published research findings in peer-reviewed academic and science journals
on human and animal exposure to phthalates and their wide variety of health
problems, as follows:
·
Infertility especially among men)
·
Cancers (e.g., liver, breast, prostate,
testicular, colon)
·
Autoimmune diseases (e.g., lupus)
·
Fertility problems (e.g., low sperm count,
poor mobility of sperm, DNA damage in sperm, lower testosterone level, and
ovarian dysfunction)
·
Obesity, resistance to insulin, and diabetes
in men
·
Smaller testes and smaller genitals on
average among male babies exposed to phthalates in mothers' wombs
·
Asthma
·
"Feminization" of male fish, frogs,
and other amphibians living in phthalates-contaminated rivers in the wild
What Are Phthalates and Where Are They Found?
Phthalates are a class of synthetic chemical compounds used widely as softeners in many plastic products (or commonly called as "plasticizers" in plastics) and other consumer products, as follows:·
Phthalates are a class of synthetic chemical compounds used widely as softeners in many plastic products (or commonly called as "plasticizers" in plastics) and other consumer products, as follows:·
·
Pharmaceutical products and medical devices
(e.g., tubes, PVC blood bags, dialysis equipment, disposable medical
examination and sterile surgical vinyl gloves)
·
Cosmetics, perfumes, and other beauty
products (e.g., face cream, nail polish)
·
Personal care products (e.g., lotion,
shampoo, soaps)
·
Children's soft-squeeze plastic toys
·
Baby's pacifiers, infants' teething rings
·
Common household products (e.g., shower
curtains, raincoats)
·
Industrial lubricants
·
Building products (e.g., carpet backing,
putty, caulk)
·
Solvents in glues and other adhesives,
paints, and wood finishes
·
As the inert ingredient in pesticides and
insect repellents
·
Food packaging
·
Sex toys (specifically the so-called jelly
rubber toys)
Specifically, phthalates are used as softeners and
plasticizers of plastics, as solubulizers (for other ingredients to dissolve
in), denaturants (to make products taste bitter), as holders of colors and
prolongers of scents in beauty and personal care products, and as solvents in
glues and paints.
Photographs: PVC (#3) plastic contains phthalates, which
soften plastics to make them flexible. Babies' pacifiers and rubber-duck toys
also contain phthalates, which make them soft and squeezable.
How Much Phthalates Are Produced?
Exact amount of phthalates produced each year varies from source to source. One figure cited was that worldwide in 1999, the phthalates volume manufactured was about 10 billion pounds (valued at U.S.$5 billion), with an average annual growth rate of 2% to 3% according to one estimate.
Exact amount of phthalates produced each year varies from source to source. One figure cited was that worldwide in 1999, the phthalates volume manufactured was about 10 billion pounds (valued at U.S.$5 billion), with an average annual growth rate of 2% to 3% according to one estimate.
Another figure has researchers estimated that more than
18 billion pounds are used each year. Still others estimated that as of 2004,
manufacturers produce about 363,000 metric tons (800 million pounds or 400,000
short tons) of phthalates annually according to another estimate.
They were first produced during the 1920s, and have been
produced in large quantities since the 1950s, when PVC was introduced
commercially. In Australia, industry uses approximately 12,000 tons of
phthalates each year to plasticize PVC products.
In Sweden, approximately 5,000 to 6,000 tons of
phthalates—including di(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate (DEHP)—are used annually. Even
in 1969, more than 800 million pounds were produced annually (according to the
U.S. Tariff Commission, 1971).
Phthalates substitutes are available but they cost about
50% more, or even double in the case of one phthalate. More than 90% of the
plasticizer volume produced annually goes into PVC.
Without phthalates, PVC is brittle and hard and has
little commercial application or value.
Ever since its popular use in the 1920s and 1930s, phthalates
have leached into drinking water, food, and air. Phthalates are found all over
the world, from the most populated urban areas to the most remote corners of
the earth. Phthalates leach easily from products because in general they are
not chemically bound to the product matrix and may thus migrate readily
(Högberg et al., 2008).
Chemistry of Phthalates: What Are Phthalates?
Phthalate plasticizers are colorless liquids (similar in viscosity and appearance to vegetable oil) with a faint odor, and they are insoluble in water.
Phthalate plasticizers are colorless liquids (similar in viscosity and appearance to vegetable oil) with a faint odor, and they are insoluble in water.
They are, however, miscible in mineral oil, hexane, and
most organic solvents, which makes them readily soluble in bodily fluids, such
as saliva and plasma.
The most widely used phthalates are di-2-ethyl hexyl
phthalate (DEHP), diisodecyl phthalate (DIDP), and diisononyl phthalate (DINP).
DEHP is the dominant plasticizer used in PVC, due to its
low cost.
Benzylbutylphthalate (BBzP) is used in the manufacture of
foamed PVC, which is mostly used as a flooring material. Phthalates with small
R and R' groups are used as solvents in perfumes and pesticides.
Of the ester plasticizers, standard phthalate esters
comprise more than 85% of the tonnage produced annually. Phthalates command the
market because of their low cost and availability.
The basic structure of "phthalate" is the
benzene ring consisting of six carbons and six hydrogen atoms (the left-most
part of the structure) bonded with two esters (which are the two carbon atoms
double-bonded to two oxygen atoms on one side and single-bonded to two other
oxygen atoms on another side). When one compares the structures of the
phthalates, one sees the similarity, as in Bis(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate and
diisodecyl phthalate above.
A list of phthalates
commonly used in consumer and industrial products worldwide
|
||
Dimethyl phthalate
|
DMP
|
C 6 H 4 (COOCH 3 ) 2
|
Diethyl phthalate
|
DEP
|
C 6 H 4 (COOC 2 H 5 ) 2
|
Diallyl phthalate
|
DAP
|
C 6 H 4 (COOCH 2 CH=CH 2 ) 2
|
Di-n-propyl phthalate
|
DPP
|
C 6 H 4 [COO(CH 2 ) 2 CH 3 ] 2
|
Di-n-butyl phthalate
|
DBP
|
C 6 H 4 [COO(CH 2 ) 3 CH 3 ] 2
|
Diisobutyl phthalate
|
DIBP
|
C 6 H 4 [COOCH 2 CH(CH 3 ) 2 ] 2
|
Butyl cyclohexyl phthalate
|
BCP
|
CH 3 (CH 2 ) 3 OOCC 6 H 4 COOC 6 H 11
|
Di-n-pentyl phthalate
|
DNPP
|
C 6 H 4 [COO(CH 2 ) 4 CH 3 ] 2
|
Dicyclohexyl phthalate
|
DCP
|
C 6 H 4 [COOC 6 H 11 ] 2
|
Butyl benzyl phthalate
|
BBP
|
CH 3 (CH 2 ) 3 OOCC 6 H 4 COOCH 2 C 6 H 5
|
Di-n-hexyl phthalate
|
DNHP
|
C 6 H 4 [COO(CH 2 ) 5 CH 3 ] 2
|
Diisohexyl phthalate
|
DIHxP
|
C 6 H 4 [COO(CH 2 ) 3 CH(CH 3 ) 2 ] 2
|
Diisoheptyl phthalate
|
DIHpP
|
C 6 H 4 [COO(CH 2 ) 4 CH(CH 3 ) 2 ] 2
|
Butyl decyl phthalate
|
BDP
|
CH 3 (CH 2 ) 3 OOCC 6 H 4 COO(CH 2 ) 9 CH 3
|
Di(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate
|
DEHP, DOP
|
C 6 H 4 [COOCH 2 CH(C 2 H 5 )(CH 2 ) 3 CH 3 ] 2
|
Di(n-octyl) phthalate
|
DNOP
|
C 6 H 4 [COO(CH 2 ) 7 CH 3 ] 2
|
Diisooctyl phthalate
|
DIOP
|
C 6 H 4 [COO(CH 2 ) 5 CH(CH 3 ) 2 ] 2
|
n-Octyl n-decyl phthalate
|
ODP
|
CH 3 (CH 2 ) 7 OOCC 6 H 4 COO(CH 2 ) 9 CH 3
|
Diisononyl phthalate
|
DINP
|
C 6 H 4 [COO(CH 2 ) 6 CH(CH 3 ) 2 ] 2
|
Diisodecyl phthalate
|
DIDP
|
C 6 H 4 [COO(CH 2 ) 7 CH(CH 3 ) 2 ] 2
|
Diundecyl phthalate
|
DUP
|
C 6 H 4 [COO(CH 2 ) 10 CH 3 ] 2
|
Diisoundecyl phthalate
|
DIUP
|
C 6 H 4 [COO(CH 2 ) 8 CH(CH 3 ) 2 ] 2
|
Ditridecyl phthalate
|
DTDP
|
C 6 H 4 [COO(CH 2 ) 12 CH 3 ] 2
|
Diisotridecyl phthalate
|
DIUP
|
C 6 H 4 [COO(CH 2 ) 10 CH(CH 3 ) 2 ] 2
|
Typically because phthalates are not
chemically bound to the product matrix, they migrate out of the product easily
and cause extensive exposure among humans and animals that come into contact
with them (Högberg et al., 2008).
Phthalates in the Environment
Effects on Fish, Frogs, and Other Amphibians in the Wild: Reproductive, Endocrine, Immune, Genotoxic, and Nephrotoxic Damages.
Effects on Fish, Frogs, and Other Amphibians in the Wild: Reproductive, Endocrine, Immune, Genotoxic, and Nephrotoxic Damages.
Phthalates and their metabolites are excreted
from human urine and wastewater (such as water that washes off cosmetics,
facial cream, lotion, shampoo). Phthalate-containing wastewater reaches the
environment via treated sewage discharged into streams, rivers, lakes, oceans,
and other bodies of water.
Phthalates also reach the natural environment
via pesticides, industrial lubricants, and phthalate-containing garbage humans
throw away. Because everything humans use eventually get disposed of into the
environment, it is inevitable that phthalates are found in the environment.
Humans and wildlife are exposed to phthalates
and other environmental pollutants which can interfere with endocrine-signaling
pathways in the body.
For about four decades (since the 1970s),
hundreds of scientists conducting research all over the world have found that
phthalates and other environmental pollutants (such as pesticides, synthetic
industrial lubricants and solvents) can disrupt the endocrine functioning of
wildlife species, thus causing permanent alterations in the structure and
function of the endocrine system.
Since phthalates are extensively used as
plasticizers decades ago, researchers have found them in the rivers and lakes.
In an article published in January 1973, a MIT researcher has found that the
phthalate concentration increases as one moves upstream: "Phthalates are
added to the river from one or more
sources which are located above river mile. As this contaminated water flows downstream, more water is added from runoff and other sources, thus diluting the phthalates.
.
In addition, biological activity in this slowly flowing river [Charles River] also tends to reduce the phthalate concentration as the water moves downstream. The two samples taken at river mile 1 but at two different depths differ significantly. This is certainly due to the severe vertical stratification exhibited by the river at this location (Hites, 1973).
sources which are located above river mile. As this contaminated water flows downstream, more water is added from runoff and other sources, thus diluting the phthalates.
.
In addition, biological activity in this slowly flowing river [Charles River] also tends to reduce the phthalate concentration as the water moves downstream. The two samples taken at river mile 1 but at two different depths differ significantly. This is certainly due to the severe vertical stratification exhibited by the river at this location (Hites, 1973).
Although phthalates' concentrations may
decrease due to dilution by river water, even the low concentrations of
phthalates affect a wide variety of wildlife in the rivers (e.g., fish, frogs
and tadpoles, and other amphibians). Numerous scientific studies focusing on
how phthalates affect aquatic animals have been conducted by researchers since
the 1970s; we present only a few studies here.
Photos: A deformed frog with five legs (left)
and a chytrid-infected (fungus-infected) dead frog floating in the water
(right). (Photos courtesy of Wikipedia) .
Freshwater Fish Became "Feminized"
and Developed Impaired Kidneys
A team of British scientists from the University of Exeter, University of Plymouth, and Brunel University found that when freshwater fish (belonging to species Rutilus rutilus) were exposed for 300 days to treated sewage effluent containing phthalates and other endocrine disruptors, the fish experienced the following reproductive, endocrine, immune, genotoxic, and nephrotoxic effects (Liney et al., 2006):
A team of British scientists from the University of Exeter, University of Plymouth, and Brunel University found that when freshwater fish (belonging to species Rutilus rutilus) were exposed for 300 days to treated sewage effluent containing phthalates and other endocrine disruptors, the fish experienced the following reproductive, endocrine, immune, genotoxic, and nephrotoxic effects (Liney et al., 2006):
·
Feminization
of male fish (with histologically altered gonads)
·
"Statistically
significant" changes in kidney development (tubule diameter)
·
Modulated
immune function (with differential cell count, total number of thrombocytes)
·
Genotoxic
damage (as indicated by micronucleus induction and single-strand breaks in gill
and blood cells)
Male Tadpoles Developed Ovaries When Exposed
to Dibutyl Phthalates
Japanese scientists from Hiroshima University and Hiroshima Prefectural Women's University studied the effects of dibutyl phthalate (DBP) on male Japanese wrinkled frog (Rana rugosa).
Japanese scientists from Hiroshima University and Hiroshima Prefectural Women's University studied the effects of dibutyl phthalate (DBP) on male Japanese wrinkled frog (Rana rugosa).
This particular phthalate, DBP, is one of the
phthalate esters widely used as a plasticizer of polyvinyl chloride resins.
The scientists discovered that "DBP is an environmentally dangerous hormone that
disrupts the pathways of testicular differentiation in genetically male animals" (Ohtani et
al., 2000).
In exposing male tadpoles to tiny amounts of
DBP, after 0.1, 1, and 10 µM DBP treatment, 0%, 7%, and 17% of tadpoles,
respectively, had developed partial or complete ovarian structure when they
should be developing complete testes.
In other words, these male tadpoles developed
female reproductive structures (ovaries) when they should be growing male
structures (testes). Why does this result occur among male
tadpoles?
Scientists explained that chemical compounds
that mimic estrogenic activity must be directly examined for their estrogenic
or antiandrogenic action on living animal species. Therefore, these scientists
concluded that DBP is a dangerous chemical and is an environmental endocrine
disruptor.
Fewer Eggs and Fewer Surviving Fry in Fish
Exposed to Phthalates
Abnormal Calcium Metabolism in Phthalate-Exposed Zebra Fish and Salmon
Abnormal Calcium Metabolism in Phthalate-Exposed Zebra Fish and Salmon
In as early as 1973, American government
scientists working with the U.S. Department of Interior's Bureau of Sport
Fisheries and Wildlife have found that fishes exposed to phthalates have fewer
eggs and fewer surviving fry.
Scientists exposed di-2-ethylhexyl phthalate
to zebra fish (Brachydanio rerio) and guppies (Poecilia reticulatus)
discovered that fish exposed to phthalates produced fewer eggs per spawn than
controlled, non-exposed fish (Mayer Jr. and Sanders,
1973).
The researchers also found that fry survival
was "significantly reduced (P < 0.05) by phthalate exposure," with
an 8 percent incidence of abortions observed among the guppy fry. Water fleas (Daphnia
magna) exposed to di-2-ethylhexyl phthalate also suffered
"significantly reduced" reproduction.
Additionally, these U.S. government
scientists also found that coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) injected
with 3 milligrams of di-2-ethylhexyl phthalate/kg of fish demonstrated
increased serum calcium. They noted that "All of the dying [zebra fish]
fry exposed to di-2-ethylhexyl phthalate died in tetany; however, tetany did
not occur in dying controls." Tetany is an abnormal condition
characterized by tetanic spasms of voluntary muscles; tetany is the state of
continuous contraction of a muscle, especially caused by a series of rapidly
repeated stimuli. What does this finding mean? It means that the tetany
observed in zebra fish and the increased serum calcium in coho salmon are
indications that di-2-ethylhexyl phthalate "may alter normal calcium
metabolism in fish" (Mayer Jr. and Sanders, 1973).
Deformed Genitals and Adverse Spermatogenesis
of African Clawed Frog
Scientists from Colorado State University have found that African clawed frogs (Xenopus laevis) exposed to very low concentrations of di-n-butyl phthalate (DBP) suffered numerous problems, as follows (Lee and Veeramachaneni, 2005):
Scientists from Colorado State University have found that African clawed frogs (Xenopus laevis) exposed to very low concentrations of di-n-butyl phthalate (DBP) suffered numerous problems, as follows (Lee and Veeramachaneni, 2005):
·
Between
4% and 6% of male frogs had only one testis (for those tadpoles that were
exposed to very low concentrations DBP, at 0, 0.1, 0.5, 1.0, 5.0, or 10.0 ppm
DBP, at the beginning of sexual differentiation).
·
Between
2% and 4% of male frogs had retained oviducts (oviducts are tubes that allow
for the passage of eggs from an ovary).
·
For
all DBP-treated male frogs, seminiferous tubule diameter and the average number
of germ cell nests per tubule were lower. Also, the number of tubules with no
germ cells was significantly higher (p < 0.05).
·
The
percent of secondary spermatogonial cell nests significantly decreased (p < 0.05) in 1.0, 5.0, and 10.0 ppm groups.
·
Several
lesions were observed in DBP-exposed frogs' testes (including denudation of
germ cells, vacuolization of Sertoli cell cytoplasm, thickening of lamina
propria of seminiferous tubules, and focal lymphocytic infiltration).
·
Entire
sections of testes containing almost exclusively mature spermatozoa were found
in 1.0, 5.0, and 10.0 ppm DBP-exposed testes, indicating impairment of
spermiation.
·
Testicular
hypoplasia (a condition of arrested development in which an organ or part
remains below the normal size or in an immature state) and seminiferous tubular
dysgenesis were observed in DBP-exposed frogs. Dysgenesis is defective
development especially of the gonads.
The scientists concluded that
"subchronic exposure to low concentrations of DBP impairs
spermatogenesis" in African clawed frogs.
Spermatogenesis is the process of male gamete
formation including formation of a spermatocyte from a spermatogonium, meiotic
division of the spermatocyte, and transformation of the four resulting
spermatids into spermatozoa. These scientists also attributed DBP to the global
decline of frogs and other amphibians, which have made headline news for more
than a decade now.
Avoid Phthalates in Your Drinking Water and
Food
For your health and your family's health, it is best to avoid all plastic containers—both for water and food—labeled #3 PVC and all containers containing phthalates.
It is best to use glass or stainless-steel food and water bottles and containers when bottling your own filtered water at home. It is difficult to avoid phthalates in this world even if you want to, so do not voluntarily ingest more phthalates by using phthalate-containing water bottles and food containers!
For your health and your family's health, it is best to avoid all plastic containers—both for water and food—labeled #3 PVC and all containers containing phthalates.
It is best to use glass or stainless-steel food and water bottles and containers when bottling your own filtered water at home. It is difficult to avoid phthalates in this world even if you want to, so do not voluntarily ingest more phthalates by using phthalate-containing water bottles and food containers!
https://www.freedrinkingwater.com/water_quality/quality2/envtoxin-phthalates1-quality-page3.htm
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