Roll of wrapping plastic stretch
film (stock image). Two chemicals increasingly used during manufacturing
to strengthen plastic wrap, soap, cosmetics, and processed food
containers have been linked to a rise in risk of high blood pressure and
diabetes in children and adolescents.
Credit: © AlenKadr / Fotolia
According to a new series of studies
out of NYU Langone Medical Center, two chemicals increasingly used
during manufacturing to strengthen plastic wrap, soap, cosmetics, and
processed food containers have been linked to a rise in risk of high
blood pressure and diabetes in children and adolescents.
The compounds, di-isononyl phthalate (DINP) and di-isodecyl phthalate
(DIDP), are both in a class of chemicals known as phthalates.
Ironically, the two chemicals were used as replacements for another
chemical, di-2-ethylhexylphlatate, or DEHP, which the same researchers
proved in previous research to have similar adverse effects.
"Our research adds to growing concerns that environmental chemicals
might be independent contributors to insulin resistance, elevated blood
pressure and other metabolic disorders," says study lead investigator
Leonardo Trasande, MD, MPP, a professor at NYU Langone.
Trasande says the series of studies are believed to be the first to
examine potential health risks from DEHP replacements. In the most
recent one, described in the journal Hypertension online July
9, the investigators report a "significant association" between high
blood pressure and the presence of DINP and DIDP levels in study
subjects. Specifically, they say, for every tenfold increase in the
amount of phthalates consumed, there was a 1.1 millimeters of mercury
increase in blood pressure.
In the earlier study, published in May in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism,
the same NYU investigators found an association between DINP and DIDP
concentrations and increased insulin resistance, a precursor to
diabetes. One in three adolescents with the highest DINP levels had the
highest insulin resistance, while for those with the lowest
concentrations of the chemicals, only one in four had insulin
resistance.
DEHP, the original chemical used as a plasticizer, was banned in 2004
in Europe after researchers elsewhere found a link between exposure to
the plasticizer and detrimental effects on human health. In the United
States, manufacturers voluntarily began to replace DEHP with DINP and
DIDP over the last decade. Trasande's own research in 2013 confirmed the
link between DEHP exposure and hypertension in Americans.
For the new study research, the NYU team reviewed blood sample and
urine analyses from participants in the National Health and Nutrition
Examination Survey. Since 1999, NHANES, as it is known, gathers
information about the prevalence and risk factors of major diseases by
annually surveying 5,000 volunteers. As part of the NYU Langone
investigation, blood samples of a diverse group of 356 children and
adolescents ages 12 to 19 were measured and evaluated for phthalates and
glucose based on their urinary levels of the substances.
Blood and urine samples were collected once between 2008 and 2012,
and the study volunteers' blood pressure was similarly measured. Diet,
physical activity, gender, race/ethnicity, income, and other factors
independently associated with insulin resistance and hypertension were
also factored into the researchers' analysis.
"Alternatives to DIDP and DINP include wax paper and aluminum wrap;
indeed, a dietary intervention that introduced fresh foods that were not
canned or packaged in plastic reduced phthalate metabolites
substantially," says Trasande. "Our study adds further concern for the
need to test chemicals for toxicity prior to their broad and widespread
use, which is not required under current federal law (the 1976 Toxic
Substances Control Act)," he says.
Trasande says there are "safe and simple" steps families can take to
limit exposure to phthalates. These include not microwaving food in
plastic containers or covered by plastic wrap, and washing plastic food
containers by hand instead of putting them in the dishwasher, where
harsh chemicals can lead to increased leaching of plasticizers into
food. He says people can also avoid using plastic containers labeled on
the bottom with the numbers 3, 6 or 7 (inside the recycle symbol), in
which chemicals such as phthalates are used.
Trasande says his team now plans to study the long-term effects of
exposure to these chemicals, in particular during pregnancy and early
childhood, which might reveal different and/or more persistent effects
on health.
Story Source:
The above post is reprinted from
materials provided by
NYU Langone Medical Center.
Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.