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August
15, 2007 --
From
LA Times
By Marla
Cone - An
epidemic of
thyroid
disease
among pet
cats could
be caused by
toxic flame
retardants
that are
widely found
in household
dust and
some pet
food,
government
scientists
reported
Wednesday.
The
often-lethal
disease was
rare in cats
until the
1980s, when
it began
appearing
widely,
particularly
in
California
cats. That
was at the
same time
industry
started
using large
volumes of
brominated
flame
retardants
in consumer
products,
including
furniture
cushions,
electronics,
mattresses
and carpet
padding.
Scientists
from the
Environmental
Protection
Agency noted
a possible
connection
between
hyperthyroidism
and flame
retardants.
The
chemicals --
known as
polybrominated
diphenyl
ethers, or
PBDEs --
mimic
thyroid
hormones, so
experts have
theorized
that high
exposure in
cats could
cause
overactive
thyroids.
Cats that
remain
indoors and
eat
fish-flavored
canned food
were found
to be the
most highly
contaminated.
"We know
there is an
association
between
indoor
living for
cats and
hyperthyroidism,"
said Linda
Birnbaum, a
senior
author of
the study
and the
EPA's
director of
experimental
toxicology.
"Our paper
does show
cats are
highly
exposed and
hyperthyroidism
may be due
to the high
PBDEs. More
studies are
needed to
fully
determine
this."
A major
unanswered
question is
whether cats
are the
proverbial
canaries in
the coal
mine,
signaling
health
dangers for
their
owners. Cats
and human
beings are
the only
mammals with
a high rate
of
hyperthyroidism.
So far, no
link has
been
established
between
human
endocrine
disorders
and exposure
to flame
retardants.
However,
"there is
growing
concern,"
the
scientists
wrote:
"It is clear
that house
cats may be
able to
serve as
sentinels
for indoor
exposure to
PBDEs for
humans who
share their
houses,"
said
Birnbaum,
one of the
world's
leading
experts on
hormone-altering
chemicals.
Brominated
flame
retardants
are
ubiquitous
outdoors and
inside
homes. The
chemicals
have been
building up
in people
and wildlife
over the
last two
decades,
particularly
in the
United
States,
where human
concentrations
have doubled
every few
years.
People in
the United
States have
the highest
PBDE levels
in humans
worldwide,
but U.S.
cats are
even more
exposed --
some with
levels 100
times
greater,
according to
the study.
Twenty-three
cats were
tested in
the EPA's
study,
including 11
with
hyperthyroidism.
The
researchers
found that
the cats
with
hyperthyroidism
had
substantially
higher
levels of a
PBDE
compound.
Symptoms of
the disease,
which is a
leading
cause of cat
death,
include
weight loss,
rapid
heartbeat
and
irritability.
"Our results
demonstrated
that cats
are being
consistently
exposed to
PBDEs, an
endocrine-disrupting
environmental
contaminant,"
the research
team, led by
Janice Dye
and Marta
Venier of
the EPA's
National
Health and
Environmental
Effects
Research
Laboratory
in North
Carolina,
wrote in
their study
published in
the journal
Environmental
Science &
Technology.
Because of
this
exposure,
"cats may be
at increased
risk for
developing
thyroid
hyperplastic
changes."
Myrto
Petreas,
branch chief
of
environmental
chemistry at
the
California
Department
of Toxic
Substances
Control,
said that
the cat
study was
small but
that it
reaffirmed
health
concerns not
only for
cats but
humans too,
"especially
children,
anyone
exposed to
high
levels."
"PBDEs are
in consumer
products, so
we get
exposed
while we use
the products
in homes and
during the
lifetime of
the
products. We
inhale or
ingest dust,
mostly from
hand-to-mouth
transfer,"
said
Petreas, who
did not
participate
in the
study.
The risk to
cats that
eat dry food
and live in
homes with
average
contamination
is minimal,
the study
said, while
"at the
other
extreme,
maximal PBDE
exposure"
occurs in
cats that
eat
fish-flavored
canned food
and live in
houses with
highly
contaminated
dust.
Cats that
eat canned
food
containing
whitefish,
salmon and
other
seafood are
exposed to
PBDE levels
up to 12
times higher
than cats
that eat dry
food, and
five times
more than
cats that
eat poultry
or beef
canned
foods, the
study said.
The
chemicals
build up in
oceans and
other water
bodies and
magnify in
food chains.
However,
much of the
exposure --
for cats as
well as
people --
comes from
dust, not
food.
Cats, while
sleeping,
often come
in direct
and
prolonged
contact with
upholstery,
carpeting
and mattress
materials
that contain
flame
retardants.
In addition,
they often
sit on
electronic
equipment.
"Because of
their
meticulous
grooming
behavior,
cats would
effectively
ingest any
volatilized
PBDEs or
PBDE-laden
dust that
deposited on
their fur
during such
activities,"
the
scientists
wrote.
Scientists
say toddlers
who crawl on
floors and
put objects
in their
mouths also
can be
highly
exposed to
the
chemical-tainted
dust, which
has been
found in
most U.S.
homes.
In people
and cats
with the
highest
levels,
Petreas
said, "it's
explained
not by diet,
but more
contact with
contaminated
sofas,
computers
and other
consumer
products."
Two
pervasive
PBDEs, used
mostly in
foam
cushions,
mattresses
and carpet
padding,
have been
banned in
the United
States since
2004. The
ban was
spurred by a
California
law.
However,
other
brominated
flame
retardants
remain in
widespread
use.
In June, the
California
Assembly
passed AB
706, written
by
Assemblyman
Mark Leno
(D-San
Francisco),
which would
prohibit
brominated
and
chlorinated
flame
retardants
in furniture
and bedding.
The bill,
which now
goes to the
Senate
Appropriations
Committee,
does not ban
their use in
electronics.
California
has the
nation's
strictest
fire-retardant
standards
for
furnishings,
so PBDE
exposure is
generally
higher than
elsewhere.
The cat
epidemic
showed up
first in
California
and the
Great Lakes
region --
the areas
with the
highest
environmental
levels of
the
chemicals.
From:
www.greatfallspro.com |