Article - Pesticides And Aggression
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With the kind permission of Peter Montague, the editor of the Rachel E-Zine on environmental issues, articles from the archives of Rachel are being re-printed through this web site. These articles offer a very good overview of many facets of environmental research, issues, problems, questions, and challenges, but for a far more comprehensive, in-depth introduction to ecology please go to the Environmental Research Foundation web page directly.
Pesticides And Agression
RACHEL'S ENVIRONMENT AND HEALTH WEEKLY
For the past
25 years, tens of millions of Americans in hundreds of cities and towns have been drinking
tap water that is contaminated with low levels of insecticides, weed killers, and
artificial fertilizer. They not only drink it, they also bathe and shower in it, thus
inhaling small quantities of farm chemicals and absorbing them through the skin.
Naturally, the problem is at its worst in agricultural areas of the country.
The most
common contaminants are carbamate insecticides (aldicarb and others), the triazine
herbicides (atrazine and others) and nitrate nitrogen.[1] For years government scientists have tested each of these chemicals
individually at low levels in laboratory animals -- searching mainly for signs of cancer
-- and have declared each of them an "acceptable risk" at the levels typically
found in groundwater.
Now a group
of biologists and medical researchers at the University of Wisconsin in Madison, led by
Warren P. Porter, has completed a 5-year experiment putting mixtures of low levels of
these chemicals into the drinking water of male mice and carefully measuring the results.
They reported recently that combinations of these chemicals -- at levels similar to those
found in the groundwater of agricultural areas of the U.S. -- have measurable detrimental
effects on the nervous, immune and endocrine (hormone) systems.[2] Furthermore, they say their research has direct implications for
humans.
Dr. Porter
and his colleagues point out that the nervous system, the immune system, and the endocrine
(hormone) system are all closely related and in constant communication with each other. If
any one of the three systems is damaged or degraded the other two may be adversely
affected. The Wisconsin researchers therefore designed their experiments to examine the
effects of agricultural chemicals on each of the three systems simultaneously.
To assess
immune system function, they measured the ability of mice to make antibodies in response
to foreign proteins. To assess endocrine system function, they measured thyroid hormone
levels in the blood. And to assess nervous system function they measured aggressive
behavior in the presence of intruder mice introduced into the cages. They also looked for
effects on growth by measuring total body weight and the weight of each animal's spleen.
The
experiments were replicated many times, to make sure the results were reproducible. They
found effects on the endocrine system (thyroid hormone levels) and the immune system, and
reduced body weight, from mixtures of low levels of aldicarb-nitrate, atrazine-nitrate,
and atrazine, aldicarb-nitrate together. They observed increased aggression from exposure
to atrazine - nitrate, and from atrazine, aldicarb-nitrate together.
The
Wisconsin research team wrote, "Of particular signficance in the collective work of
Boyd and others,[3] Porter and others,[4] and our current study[2] is that THYROID HORMONE CONCENTRATION CHANGE
was consistently a response due to mixtures, but NOT usually to individual
chemicals." [Emphasis in the original].
In the
five-year experiment, thyroid hormone levels rose or fell depending upon the mixture of
farm chemicals put into the drinking water. Dr. Porter and his colleagues present evidence
from other studies showing that numerous farm chemicals can affect the thyroid hormone
levels of wildlife and humans. PCBs and dioxins can have similar effects, they note.
Proper
levels of thyroid hormone are essential for brain development of humans prior to birth.
Some, though not all, studies have shown that attention deficit and/or hyperactivity
disorders in children are linked to changes in the levels of thyroid hormone in the blood.
Children
with multiple chemical sensitivity (MCS) have abnormal thyroid levels. Furthermore,
irritability and aggressive behavior are linked to thyroid hormone levels.
Interviewed
recently by Keith Hamm of the SANTA BARBARA [CAL.] INDEPENDENT,[5] Dr. Porter explained, "Earlier work had shown that thyroid
hormone typically changed when exposure to these pesticides occurred. Thyroid hormone not
only affects and controls your metabolic rate, that is, how fast you burn food, it also
controls your irritability level.
For example,
Type A personalities are more assertive, more aggressive, more hyper. These people tend to
have higher levels of thyroid hormone.
Type B
personalities--people that are really laid back, really take things very easily--have
lower levels of thyroid hormone. We expected that changes in thyroid [would] change
irritability levels. This was a concern because there was information that kids are
getting more hyper and [that their] learning abilities are going down," Dr. Porter
said.
A recent
study of 4 and 5 year-old children in Mexico specifically noted a decrease in mental
ability and an increase in aggressive behavior among children exposed to pesticides.[6] Elizabeth A. Guillette and
colleagues studied two groups of Yaqui Indian children living in the Yaqui Valley in
northern Sonora, Mexico.
One group of
children lives in the lowlands dominated by pesticide-intensive agriculture (45 or more
sprayings each year) and the other group lives in the nearby upland foothills where their
parents make a living by ranching without the use of pesticides. The pesticide-exposed
children had far less physical endurance in a test to see how long they could keep jumping
up and down; they had inferior hand-eye coordination; and they could not draw a simple
stick figure of a human being, which the upland children could readily do.
Notably, in
the Guillette study we find this description of the behavior of pesticide-exposed
children: "Some valley children were observed hitting their siblings when they passed
by, and they became easily upset or angry with a minor corrective comment by a parent.
These aggressive behaviors were not noted in the [pesticide-free] foothills
[children]."
The human
body can defend itself against poisons to some degree, but Dr. Porter and his colleagues
describe ways in which low-level mixtures of pesticides and fertilizer might get past the
body's defenses: The body is prepared to protect itself against poisons taken by mouth.
The liver begins to produce enzymes that try to break down fat-soluble chemicals. However,
if a poison enters through the lungs or the skin, the body does not offer the same kind of
defenses. Furthermore, the body's ability to put up defenses may be compromised by taking
certain medications (e.g., antibiotics), or by receiving "pulses" of toxins
rather than a steady dose.
Receiving
"pulses" of poisons would be normal in the case of agricultural poisons which
are sprayed onto crops only at certain times of the year. During those periods, people
living near sprayed fields might get a sudden dose of poison via their lungs, their skin
and their drinking water. Dr. Porter describes such a situation this way:
"Imagine
[that] you're standing in a boxing ring and a boxer jumps in with you, and he walks toward
you smiling with his hand outstretched. And you reach out to shake his hand and he smacks
you in the stomach as hard as he can. And when you bring your arms up to defend yourself,
he backs away. Finally you get tired of holding your defenses up and you drop them and he
rushes in and smacks you again. That's the physical equivalent to a 'pulse dose,' which is
normally what we tend to get exposed to.
"The
defenses we have take a while to induce, just like it takes a while to bring your arms up.
It takes anywhere from a half a day to five days to induce those [defenses] to appropriate
levels. If you're in a particular stage of your hormone cycle or you're taking some
antibiotics, it can compromise your ability to defend yourself even if you did have enough
time to induce your defenses. If you've got pulse doses coming in under your defenses or
coming in faster than you can bring your defenses up then you've got a situation where
you're totally vulnerable.
"If
you've got a pregnant mom, for example, in day 20 when the fetus's neural tube is closing
and she gets an exposure, she hasn't had enough time to induce her defenses. Her thyroid
level goes up or goes down, the hormone crosses the placenta and can permanently alter the
developmental pattern of the fetus's brain. And then the pulse dose is gone, you have no
detection, mom doesn't even know she's pregnant, and you may have an offspring that is
neurologically compromised and wonder, 'How did this happen?'"
In the
interview with Keith Hamm, Dr. Porter expressed concern for the overall effect of
pesticides on the nation's children:
Hamm:
"Are pesticides, herbicides, and fertilizer used more or less these days than fifty
years ago and have the toxicities changed?"
Porter:
"The usage has continued to climb. There's an enormous amount of these [chemicals
being used] right now. There was a recent study that examined the urine of people across
the country, [asking] if people are being exposed. On average, anywhere from five to seven
compounds were being excreted.
There's a
great deal of expo- sure to the general populace. "And yes, the toxicities have
definitely changed. [Some toxicities are now measured] in the parts-per-trillion range. I
would point out that fetuses are sensitive to chemicals in the parts per quadrillion
range."
Hamm:
"I would assume that most people in this country are eating conventionally grown
food. If that's the case, wouldn't the problems be more apparent? Why are there not more
hyperaggressive dim-witted people with poor immune systems?"
Porter:
"If we really looked carefully at what's been happening in this county, you might
find exactly that happening."
* * *
Because of
recent violence in small cities and towns (such as Littleton, Colorado, Laramie, Wyoming,
and Jasper, Texas), this is a time when Americans are searching for the causes of violence
in their society. Some are blaming a decline in religious upbringing. Others are blaming
households with the parents working and no one minding the kids. Some say the cause is
violent movies, violent TV and extremist internet sites, combined with the ready
availability of cheap guns. Still others point to a government that has often sanctioned
the violence of "gunboat diplomacy" to open foreign markets for U.S.
corporations.
No one seems
to be asking whether pesticides, fertilizers and toxic metals [see REHW #529, #551] are
affecting our young people's mental capacity, emotional balance, and social adjustment.
From the work of Warren Porter, Elizabeth Guillette and others, it is apparent that these
are valid questions.
--Peter
Montague
(National
Writers Union, UAW Local 1981/AFL-CIO)
[1] Jack E. Barbash and Elizabeth A. Resek, PESTICIDES IN GROUND WATER
(Chelsea, Michigan: Ann Arbor Press, 1996); Richard Wiles and others, TAP WATER BLUES
(Washington, D.C.: Environmental Working Group, 1994); Brian A. Cohen and Richard Wiles,
TOUGH TO SWALLOW (Washington, D.C.: Environmental Working Group, 1997); Environmental
Working Group, POURING IT ON; NITRATE CONTAMINATION OF DRINKING WATER (Washington, D.C.:
Environmental Working Group, 1996). See www.ewg.org. And: Gina M. Solomon and Lawrie Mott,
TROUBLE ON THE FARM; GROWING UP WITH PESTICIDES IN AGRICULTURAL COMMUNITIES (New York:
Natural Resources Defense Council, October, 1998). Return to article) [2] Warren P. Porter, James W. Jaeger and Ian H. Carlson, "Endocrine,
immune and behavioral effects of aldicarb (carbamate), atrazine (triazine) and nitrate
(fertilizer) mixtures at groundwater concentrations," TOXICOLOGY AND INDUSTRIAL
HEALTH Vol. 15, Nos. 1 and 2 (1999), pgs. 133-150. Return to article) [3] C.A. Boyd, M.H. Weiler and W.P. Porter, "Behavioral and
neurochemical changes associated with chronic exposure to low-level concentration of
pesticide mixtures," JOURNAL OF TOXICOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH Vol. 30, No. 3
(July 1990), pgs. 209-221. Return to article) [4] W.P. Porter and others, "Groundwater pesticides: interactive
effects of low concentrations of carbamates aldicarb and methamyl and the triazine
metribuzin on thyroxine and somatotropin levels in white rats," JOURNAL OF TOXICOLOGY
AND ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH Vol. 40, No. 1 (September 1993), pgs. 15-34. And see: W.P. Porter
and others, "Toxicant-disease-environment interactions associated with suppression of
immune system, growth, and reproduction," SCIENCE Vol. 224, No. 4652 (June 1, 1984),
pgs. 1014-1017. Return to article) [5] Keith Hamm, "What's In the Mix?" SANTA BARBARA [CALIFORNIA]
INDEPENDENT April 15, 1999, pg. 21 and following pages. Thanks to George Rauh for
alerting us to this interview. Return
to article) [6] Elizabeth A. Guillette and others, "An Anthropological Approach to
the Evaluation of Preschool Children Exposed to Pesticides in Mexico," ENVIRONMENTAL
HEALTH PERSPECTIVES Vol. 106, No. 6 (June 1998), pgs. 347-353. Return
to article) Descriptor
terms: violence; hormones; thyroid hormone; development; aggression; chemicals and
behavior; behavior and chemicals; delinquency; studies; mexico; warren p. porter;
elizabeth guillette; adhd; attention disorders; hyperactivity; learning disabilities;
brain development; emotional stability;
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