Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byMitchell Williams Modified over 9 years ago
1
Pesticide Illness Part 4 Chronic Health Effects Laws and Regulations Prepared by: Rupali Das, MD, MPH, California Department of Health Services, Michael O’Malley, MD, MPH, University of California, Davis, Laura Styles, MPH, Public Health Institute
2
2 Pesticides Chronic Health Effects Respiratory (asthma) Neurological Reproductive and Developmental Carcinogenic
3
3 Chronic Toxicity of Pesticides Chronic Toxicity of Pesticides Types of chronic effects –Cumulative effects of low level exposures –Persistent effects of acute exposure Individual evaluations –Epidemiologic studies –Specific associations –Classification of reproductive, cancer toxicity
4
4 Chronic Effect Studies: Design & Interpretation Pre-exposure information absent Exposure difficult to measure Selection of control groups important Multiple, variable compounds Confounders, unknown exposures
5
5 Pesticides and Asthma, Children Increase in pediatric asthma Suspected factors –Air pollution –Genetics –Hygiene hypothesis –Chemicals, including pesticides
6
6 Pesticides and Asthma, Adults Farmer occupation –Canada (Hoppin et al. 2002) –US (Senthilselvan et al. 1992) Case reports –Pyrethrin, tetramethrin, allethrin, chlorothalonil, fluazinam
7
7 Chronic Neurologic Effects of Pesticides Organophosphates Increased vibration sense; Motor, sensor neuropathy; Cognitive, affective deficits Methyl bromide, sulfuryl fluoride Olfactory, cognitive, behavioral deficits Paraquat, others Parkinson’s Disease?
8
8 Case Subway Rider Exposed to Sarin 35 year-old man exposed to sarin with severe dyspnea, convulsions Comatose, slightly cyanotic; miosis; profuse muscarinic symptoms Source: EHP/NIEHS
9
9 Subway Rider Exposed to Sarin Neurobehavioral Status at 6 months Test results –No global intellectual impairment –Performance impairments –Retrograde amnesia –Passivity and shallow affect Mild neurobehavioral dysfunction
10
10 MPTP MPP + Paraquat Parkinson’s Disease Association with Paraquat
11
11 Parkinson’s Disease Pesticide Theory Direct toxins –Neurotoxins Dieldrin, rotenone –Mitochondrial toxins Chlordane, paraquat, permethrin Modulators of metabolism –DDT, organophosphates, pyrethrins
12
12 Parkinson’s Disease Postulated Causes 20% family history Environmental associations –Farmer occupation –Any occupational pesticide exposure –Living on a farm Pesticides –Initiator, promoter, or effect modifier?
13
13 Endpoints –Reproductive –Developmental Exposure –Maternal –Paternal Reproductive & Developmental Effects of Pesticide Exposure
14
14 Reproductive & Developmental Effects Maternal Exposure Agricultural exposure –Spontaneous abortions & fetal death –Congenital malformations Greenhouse workers –Reduced fecundability –Excess stillbirths
15
15 Reproductive & Developmental Effects Paternal Exposure Documented –Azospermia, Oligospermia Dibromochloropropane (DBCP) Suggested –Reduced sex ratio (M/F) –Spontaneous abortion, preterm delivery
16
16 Occupation surrogate for exposure Poor exposure assessment Exposure usually to multiple pesticides Timing of exposure uncertain Control for other toxins may be poor Reproductive & Developmental Effects Methodological Problems
17
17 34 year-old woman with spontaneous abortion at 17 weeks gestation Smokes ½ pack/day; occasional home pesticide use; 2 healthy children Fetal pathology: one stub for leg, shortened umbilical cord, no genitals. Case W oman with Spontaneous Abortion
18
18 Woman with Spontaneous Abortion Occupational History Seasonal worker in seed-retailing Became pregnant one month after starting work. Husband is a postal worker
19
19 Woman with Spontaneous Abortion Maternal Exposure History Occupational –Captan: animal teratogen –Carboxin: growth suppression, high doses –Chlorpyrifos: no evidence –Methoxychlor: teratogen; estrogenic –Thiram: reduced growth at high doses Home –Permethrin: reduced fertility, high doses
20
20 Pesticides and Cancer Animal data –High dose laboratory studies Human data –Epidemiological studies
21
21 Postulated Mechanisms of Pesticide Carcinogenicity Mechanism Pesticide Examples Genotoxicity Captan, DBCP Tumor promotion Organochlorines Hormonal action Atrazine, ziram Immunotoxicity Aldicarb, 2,4-D Peroxisome proliferation 2,4-D, 2,4,5-T
22
22 Insecticides: dichlorvos, organochlorines Herbicides: amitrole, cyanazine Fumigants: ethylene oxide, formaldehyde Fungicides: captan, maneb, zineb Growth regulators: daminozide Pesticide Animal Carcinogens
23
23 Pesticides & Cancer in Farmers Low mortality due to other causes Elevated risks for cancer Most studies on male farmers Limited data on specific exposures Other hazards
24
24 Pesticides and Cancer Associations: Human Epidemiologic Studies Lindane: Lymphoma Dichlorvos, methoxyclor: Leukemia 2,4-D, diazinon: Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma Atrazine: Ovarian Arsenicals: Lung, skin
25
25 Pesticides Associated with Cancer: Organophospates, Carbamates Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma –Organophosphates –Carbamates Lung cancer Leukemia
26
26 Pesticides Associated with Cancer: Chlorophenoxy Herbicides Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma –Farmers, gardeners Soft tissue sarcoma
27
27 Pesticides and Childhood Cancer Malignancies linked to pesticides –Leukemia –Brain cancer –Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma –Wilm’s tumor –Ewing’s sarcoma
28
28 Pesticides and Childhood Cancer Childhood Pesticide Exposure Widespread home pesticide use Pet products, insecticidal shampoos Vertical concentration gradient Deposit on toys, furniture
29
29 Pesticides and Childhood Cancer Risk Factors Parental home/garden pesticide use Parental occupational exposure Prenatal exposure Source: USDA
30
30 Human Pesticide Cancer Studies: Methodological Issues Case definition may not be precise Recall bias Small samples Crude exposure assessment Timing of exposure cannot be confirmed Genetic-environmental interactions
31
31 Summary Chronic Pesticide Illness Risks depend on pesticide –Neurological disease: Organophosphates –Cancer: Chlorophenoxy herbicides –Reproductive toxicity: Methyl bromide Preventing illness –Targeted use reduction –Worker protection –Reduced home use
32
32 Pesticide Laws and Regulations Federal –Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (1972) –Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (1939) –Worker Protection Standard (1992) –Food Quality Protection Act (1996) State laws vary
33
33 Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA) Control of distribution, sale, use Gives US EPA authority to –Study pesticide consequences –Require pesticide purchase registration Requires –Pesticide applicator certification –Registration, proper labeling
34
34 Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FFDCA) Allows US EPA to establish tolerances for pesticides in food Small fraction of marketed food tested for pesticide residue
35
35 Worker Protection Standard Reduce farmworker pesticide illness Hazard training and communication, decontamination facilities, notification, emergency medical care
36
36 Food Quality Protection Act (FQPA) Health-based standard for pesticides in foods Requires US EPA to review tolerances for pesticide tolerances in food Focus on children
37
37
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.