Phthalates, found soaps, lotions and food packaging, may disrupt
insulin production, researchers say.
"Our study supports
the hypothesis that certain environmental chemicals can contribute to the
development of diabetes," said lead researcher Monica Lind, an associate
professor of environmental medicine in the section for occupational and
environmental medicine at Uppsala University.
"Most people come into
daily contact with phthalates as they are used as softening agents in everyday
plastics and as carriers of perfumes in cosmetics and self-care products,"
she added.
The study's implications
"must be to cut down on plastics and choose self-care products without
perfumes," Lind said.
But the research does not
prove cause and effect. To find out whether phthalates (pronounced THAL ates)
truly are risk factors for diabetes, further studies are needed that show
similar associations, she said.
"Experimental studies
are also needed regarding what biological mechanisms might underlie these
connections," Lind stressed.
The report was published
online April 12 and in the June print edition of Diabetes Care.
For the study, Lind's team
collected data on more than 1,000 Swedish men and women, age 70, who took part
in the Prospective Investigation of the Vasculature in Uppsala Seniors Study.
The researchers measured
the participants' blood sugar, insulin levels and levels of toxins from the
breakdown of phthalates.
As expected, they found
diabetes was more common among those who were overweight and had high
cholesterol.
And they also found an
association between blood levels of some phthalates and diabetes. That
association remained even after taking into account obesity, cholesterol,
smoking and exercise.
For people with high
phthalate levels, the risk of developing diabetes was about double compared to
those with lower levels, the investigators found.
Some phthalates were also
linked to disrupted insulin production, the researchers said. Insulin is a
hormone that helps deliver blood sugar into the body's cells for energy.
Without insulin, or with too little of the hormone, too much sugar stays in the
blood, setting the stage for diabetes.
"Even at relatively
low levels of phthalate in the blood, the risk of getting diabetes begins to
rise," Lind added.
Other studies have linked
these chemicals with breast growth in boys and reproductive problems in men,
possibly caused by estrogen disruption.
Phthalates are used in
hundreds of products, such as toys, vinyl flooring and wall coverings,
detergents, lubricating oils, food packaging, pharmaceuticals, blood bags and
tubing, according to information from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
Personal care products, such as nail polish, hair sprays and shampoos, also
contain phthalates.
At present, "the FDA
does not have compelling evidence that phthalates, as used in cosmetics, pose a
safety risk," according to the FDA website.
In the United States,
companies are not required to test the long-term health effects of chemicals
before using them in consumer products. Lind said this means the dangers of
hazardous chemicals aren't known until they are already widely used.
Lind said the health
effects of chemicals should be tested before they reach the consumer market
similar to the way drugs get tested before being approved.
"We are looking at a
tip of an iceberg," she said in terms of a possible health crisis.
"We are just scratching the very top of the iceberg."
The way the system is
designed, if phthalates were banned, they would be replaced by other chemicals
about which even less is known, Lind said.
According to the
Environmental Working Group, a group trying to rid hazardous chemicals from
consumer products, there is no practical way to choose phthalate-free products.
Sometimes the print on ingredient labels is too small to read, and different names
are often used for the same plasticizing chemicals. And some products lack
ingredient labels even though they're required by federal regulations.
That said, some of the
names to look for in cosmetics, self-care products, solid air fresheners, and
scented candles are: mono-methyl phthalate (MMP), mono-ethyl phthalate (MEP)
and mono-isobutyl phthalate (MiBP), which are types of the chemicals
dimethylphthalate (DMP), diethyl phthalate (DEP) and di-isobutyl phthalate
(DiBP). DMP is also used in ink and as a softening agent in plastics.
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