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Northland Findings:
Levels of organochlorines found to be "hot" in
NZ and "scalding" in Northland.

A Summary of Current
Knowledge
From: "Nutrition Action
Healthletter"
October 1, 2000
Dioxin
for Dinner?
Liebman, Bonnie
(author)
It's the most potent animal
carcinogen ever tested. Evidence is building that it causes birth defects,
diabetes, learning and developmental delays, endometriosis, and immune system
abnormalities.
How can one chemical and its relatives be so devastating
to so many parts of the body?
"Dioxin is diabolic," says
epidemiologist Richard Clapp of the Boston University School of Public
Health. "That's why I call it the Darth Vader of toxic chemicals. It disrupts
many systems. You don't want it in your neighborhood."
Or in your
food. Ninety percent of the dioxin that enters our bodies comes from meat, cheese, milk, butter, and
other foods that contain animal fat
.
Q: What is
dioxin?
A: It's a complicated family of 75 chemicals, including dioxins,
furans, and PCBs. One of the worst dioxins is
2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD). The molecule binds particularly
strongly to intracellular receptors in the nuclei of animal and human cells.
So dioxin can easily get into the nucleus, where the cell's DNA is located,
and wreak havoc. If it damages the DNA, that could cause cancer or birth
defects. It could also alter the DNA's instructions to make normal enzymes,
hormones, and other proteins, which could lead to any of a number of
diseases.
Q: Are the receptors there to admit things the cell
needs?
A: We're not sure exactly what the receptors do. But we know that
they allow the cell to respond to signals and reproduce genes and that they
pick up other diesel toxins, like benzopyrene from diesel fuel or tobacco
smoke.
Q: What about dioxin's cousins?
A: The polychlorinated
dibenzofurans--often called furans--are closely related to dioxin. So are
PCBs, or polychlorinated biphenyls [see "All in the Dioxin Family," p. 4].
There are 135 furans and 209 PCBs. Of the 419 chemicals from all three
families, 30 have dioxin-like toxicity, but we're usually exposed to a
mixture of toxic and non-toxic members of each family at the same
time.
Q: How do they get into the environment?
A: PCBs were used
as insulators in electrical equipment, but their production was banned in
1977. Today, they're mainly found in electrical transformers in large office
or apartment buildings. When there's a fire in an old building, they're
released into the atmosphere. That's unfortunate because when you burn PCBs,
it produces furans, which are more toxic than PCBs.
Dioxins and furans
can be produced when almost anything is burned under the right conditions. So
two big sources have been municipal waste incinerators and hospital
incinerators, though recently, government regulations appear to have cut
those emissions dramatically.
Bleaching wood pulp with free chlorine to
make paper white has been another major source. Dioxin is released into the
waste water, although the amounts have declined because most plants no longer
use free chlorine.
Q: How does dioxin get from incinerators to
people?
A: It goes into the air. People can breathe in the particles, but
a bigger problem is that the particles can settle on grazing land. Cows eat
the grass and the dioxin gets concentrated in the fat in their meat and
milk. It also gets concentrated in cattle and hogs that are fed
dioxin-tainted grain.
Dioxin particles can also fall into rivers,
streams, and other bodies of water--or get there in runoff. It settles on the
bottom. When fish and shellfish ingest small particles of sediment, dioxin
builds up in their fat or organs. In Maine, pregnant women are advised not to
eat the green stuff in lobsters because it's high in dioxin. People call it
the "tomalley," but it's actually a combined liver and pancreas--a
hepatopancreas.
Q: So the dioxins get concentrated as they move up the
food chain?
A: Yes. More than 90 percent of our exposure comes from food,
mostly fish, meat, poultry, and non-skim dairy products. Fattier fish have
more than leaner fish. Shellfish like lobsters are low in fat, but the dioxin
may be in their hepatopancreas or organs, not the meat.
Q: And it
accumulates in our bodies?
A: Yes. It's like the daily newspaper. It
comes into the house every day but you don't notice it. It has a cumulative
effect.
Q: Can you get rid of dioxin?
A: Yes. There's a dynamic
within the body of accumulation and excretion of toxic substances. Dioxin is
accumulated in fat, so if you lose weight, you lose some with the fat. If
you're breastfeeding, you get rid of it through the breast milk. Humans get
their greatest dose of dioxin during breastfeeding because it's concentrated
in breast milk and because the infant is so small that the dose per pound of
body weight is quite high. The benefits of breastfeeding still outweigh the
risks of dioxin, though we'd rather not have to make such a choice.
Q:
How long does it take to get rid of dioxin?
A: Its half-life is about
seven years--in other words, it takes seven years for half of it to be
excreted by the body. The average levels of dioxin in the U.S. population are
declining, according to the Environmental Protection Agency [EPA]. So a
40-year-old today has less than a 40-year-old would have had 15 years
ago.
ONE IN A HUNDRED
Q: What harm does dioxin cause?
A:
First of all, it's a known carcinogen. TCDD is the most potent
animal carcinogen ever tested. It causes tumors in both genders of every
species and every strain of animal that's been tested. And the animals
get different types of tumors, so it doesn't just initiate tumors, it
also promotes the growth of tumors caused by other initiators.
Q: And
it's more potent than we thought?
A: Yes. The EPA recently released a
draft report that projected an excess cancer risk of one in 100 for the most
sensitive people who consume a diet high in animal fats. In other words, the
risk of getting cancer from dioxin--over and above the risk of cancer from
other sources--is one in 100 for some people. That's a worst-case scenario.
It's for the most sensitive responders among the five percent of the
population who consume the most dioxin. It's an upper bound estimate--the
lower bound is zero. But it's still shocking.
And the EPA's draft
estimates that the upper bound risk for the most sensitive responders to
average exposure is one in 1,000. That's not a small risk.
Q: Are the
EPA's draft estimates reliable?
A: They're the most reliable ones we
have. The estimates now go to the EPA's Scientific Advisory Board, which
includes outside consultants to the agency. I was a consultant on the Board
five years ago, when it reviewed the EPA's last estimates. But there are also
representatives from the American Paper Institute and consultants from
industry-funded groups like Harvard's Center for Risk Analysis.
Q:
What happened at the Advisory Board's last review?
A: In 1995, the Board
told the EPA to redo parts of the risk estimates. That led the agency to
gather more science to justify its final draft. But the evidence led the
agency to increase its risk estimates, so it backfired on the industry folks.
Since then, several studies have looked at workers who sprayed or
manufactured herbicides that contained dioxin, and data showing how much harm
was caused by each level of exposure to the herbicides were added to the
animal data.
Q: What kind of cancer does dioxin cause in
people?
A: Some studies suggest that it promotes soft-tissue sarcomas,
which are cancers of the fat and muscle, and lung cancer. Most of the
studies indicate an increased risk of all cancers. They don't focus on one
because there are so few individual cancers in small studies of exposed
populations.
Q: How powerful is dioxin compared to other
carcinogens?
A: It doesn't cause as much cancer as smoking. It may be in
the same ballpark as radon or second-hand tobacco smoke. But that's based
on mathematical projections from models, and all of the projections are
shaky.
BEYOND CANCER
Q: Do dioxins impair learning
behavior?
A: PCBs appear to lower IQ or cause developmental delays in the
children of women who ate large quantities of PCB-tainted fish during
pregnancy. The studies that monitor these children are still going on, so we
don't know for how long the adverse effects last. Up until age seven,
researchers are still finding measurable developmental delays. Over time,
those delays may become imperceptible, but we don't know about
IQ.
It's also possible that PCB exposure may only affect learning in a
minority of children who, for some reason, are more vulnerable. In one study,
a majority of highly exposed children scored in the normal range on a
memory scale. But a minority was also twice as likely as other kids to score
in the "poor" range.
Q: How does dioxin affect reproduction?
A:
Dioxins seem to impair the development of the human reproductive
system. There have been case reports of hypospadias--a birth defect in which
the urethra opens on the underside of the penis--in populations exposed
to dioxin.
Researchers have also found a decrease in the number of
male babies born in Seveso, Italy, since July 10, 1976, when there was an
explosion at a chemical plant making pesticides like 2,4,5-T--the "T" stands
for trichlorophenoxyacetic acid. The containment vessel exploded, sending
a black plume of smoke into the sky. Black dust and particles of
the dioxin-contaminated pesticide fell on people who lived miles downwind
from the explosion. The dioxin killed pets and contaminated the
soil.
A recent study of former Seveso residents compared the ratio of
males to females born in Zone A, which was closest to the explosion, and Zone
B, which was further away, to ratios elsewhere. Usually, 51 percent
of newborns are male and 49 percent are female. But among children of men
who lived in Seveso, only 44 percent were male in the years since 1976.
And among children of men who were younger than 19 when the explosion
occurred, only 38 percent were male.
Zone A is still evacuated, 24
years after the explosion. In the U.S., dioxin was the most worrisome
contaminant at Times Beach in Missouri and at Love Canal in New York
State.
Q: How might dioxin harm males?
A: We don't know. One
theory is that it's toxic to the male fetus. Another is that it damages the Y
chromosome, so sperm with Y chromosomes don't fertilize eggs. It's the Y
chromosome that makes a fertilized egg develop into a male.
Q: Does
dioxin have other effects on males?
A: Yes. In animal studies, we see
decreased testicular size and decreased sperm production. That's in adult
rats who were exposed to dioxins before they were born. Dioxin also lowers
testosterone levels in men.
Q: And it causes birth defects?
A:
Yes. During the Vietnam War, the U.S. military used an herbicide called Agent
Orange to defoliate the jungles of Southeast Asia. The herbicide is 50
percent 2,4,5-T. Small amounts of dioxin are produced when 2,4,5-T is made,
so it's an unavoidable contaminant. Studies on Vietnam vets exposed to Agent
Orange suggest that their children have an increased risk of
spina bifida.
That's a birth defect that occurs when the neural
tube--which develops into the spinal cord--fails to close during the first
six weeks of gestation. Children born with spina bifida often lack bowel and
bladder control, and many are paralyzed from the waist down or suffer from
mental retardation. The evidence that dioxin causes the defect is strong
enough that Vietnam vets are compensated if their children are born with
spina bifida.
Other than that, we don't have strong evidence that dioxin
causes specific birth defects in humans. But in animal studies, it's a
powerful teratogen--something that causes birth defects. Its teratogenic
effects in animals are as dramatic as its carcinogenic effects. It causes
different defects in different organs in different species and strains of
animals. For example, it causes cleft palate in mice, malformed kidneys in
rats, and extra ribs in rabbits.
Q: Does dioxin impair the immune
system?
A: Yes. One of the EPA's dioxin experts, Linda Birnbaum, calls
dioxin an "immune modulator," because it makes the immune systems of animals
both under-reactive and overreactive to stimuli. An over-reactive immune
system may raise the risk of auto-immune diseases like lupus. An
under-reactive immune system is less able to respond to an antigenic
challenge--that is, it makes vaccines less effective and leaves the animal
less able to fight off infections and possibly diseases like
cancer.
The evidence in humans is limited. But after the residents of
Quail Run, Missouri, were exposed to dioxin-contaminated oil and debris from
Agent Orange manufacturing plants, they had a large number of welts on
a skin-prick test, which is designed to detect allergies. That meant
that they were allergic to many things--it's a sign of an over-reactive
immune system--though the welts diminished over time.
Q: Does dioxin
cause diabetes?
A: The risk of diabetes seems to be elevated in the Ranch
Hands--the Air Force troops who had the job of spraying Agent Orange in
Vietnam. Researchers recently studied Ranch Hands who weren't exposed to
Agent Orange, which means that their dioxin levels were similar to
most Americans'. They found that those with higher dioxin levels--within
the normal range--had a higher risk of diabetes than those with lower
dioxin levels.
Q: Does dioxin have any other long-term
effects?
A: It has been shown to cause either endometriosis or a
proliferation of endometrial tissue in monkeys, mice, and rats. In humans,
the evidence is less clear, but one small study found higher levels of PCBs
in infertile women with endometriosis than in infertile women without the
disease.
Q: Which of dioxin's adverse effects are conclusive?
A:
Everyone, except perhaps some industry groups, accepts that dioxin is a human
carcinogen. IARC, the International Agency for Research on Cancer, which is
part of the World Health Organization, reclassified it as a human carcinogen
in 1997. The studies on veterans are strong enough that they get compensated
if their children are born with spina bifida. We have animal evidence for
developmental delays and reproductive hormonal effects. The human evidence is
not as strong for endometriosis and immunotoxic effects.
[ILLUSTRATION
OMITTED]
Epidemiologist Richard Clapp is an associate professor of
Environmental Health at the Boston University School of Public Health. He has
done extensive research on veterans and workers who have been exposed to
dioxin. Clapp spoke to Nutrition Action's Bonnie Liebman.
RELATED
ARTICLE: DODGING DIOXIN
It starts out as emissions from incinerators and
spills from electrical transformers. It ends up in cheeseburgers, chicken
wings, and pizza.
Dioxin and its chemical cousins, the furans and the
dioxin-like PCBs, make their way from the air, water, soil, and sediment into
plants. As animals eat the plants, and people eat the animals, the
concentration of dioxin climbs.
Clearly, one way to minimize your
exposure to dioxin is to avoid animal foods, including dairy products. A more
targeted approach is to eat less animal fat, since that's where dioxin and
its fat-soluble relatives reside.
"In most instances, anyone who reduces
the amount of animal fat in their diet will reduce the amount of dioxin they
consume," says Dwain Winters of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA). "Vegans--who eat no animal products--should get the lowest levels, but
ovo-lacto-vegetarians who substitute full-fat dairy products and eggs for
meat can be exposed to levels similar to those found in a typical
diet."
The EPA recently released draft estimates of dioxin, furan, and
PCB levels in beef, pork, poultry, milk, and seafood (see "The Dioxin is
Cast"). The seafood numbers aren't as bad as they seem. The EPA's draft
estimates for dioxin levels in fish and shellfish are higher than for other
animal foods, but they're the least certain because only limited information
is available.
Seafood Uncertainty
Dioxin levels in fish and
shellfish are the toughest to estimate "because it's much harder to get
representative samples of the seafood we eat," says Winters. "And the levels
of dioxin depend on where the fish live, what they have eaten, and where they
are on the food chain."
Most of the seafood people eat is marine or
farm-raised freshwater fish, which have lower levels of dioxin than wild
freshwater fish. Two of the most commonly eaten fish are pollock--the white
fish that ends up in most fish sticks and fried fish sandwiches--and tuna.
"They tend to have lower levels of dioxin because they live in open marine
waters that are cleaner," says Winters.
Catfish is the most popular
freshwater fish, thanks to restaurants like Red Lobster and Cracker Barrel.
Most catfish and trout are now farm-raised and fed largely plant meal, which
means that they tend to have lower dioxin levels than their wild-caught,
carnivorous cousins.
"EPA's draft freshwater fish numbers are taken from
wild-caught fish in the late 1980s," says Winters. "They're not necessarily
indicative of wild fish caught today or farm-raised freshwater fish." As for
salmon, "much of it is farm-raised in the ocean, but you'd expect even
wild-caught salmon to be lower in dioxin, because they spend their adult life
in the ocean."
Other fish, like rockfish, striped bass, snapper, and
redfish, might have more dioxin, because they often breed in estuarine
waters. That's where the ocean meets freshwater, so it's more contaminated
than the oceans.
"Seafood in the marketplace is harvested from all over
the globe, not just from our local waters," says Winters, "which means that
overall you're less likely to get dioxin-contaminated seafood. There's a
great leveling."
And because dioxin in the environment keeps dropping,
older data may not reflect current levels. "More effort is going to be put
into measuring dioxin levels in fish and shellfish," says Winters, "and we
also want to periodically go back and do beef, pork, poultry, and other foods
because everything's changing."
Smart Strategies
It's not
seafood, but the animal fat from meal poultry, seafood, and dairy foods that
boosts the average person's dioxin burden the most. But you can't take the
EPA's draft estimates at face value.
The beef, pork and poultry numbers
represent averages for all cuts. If you eat leaner cuts of meat (like
sirloin, round steak, or pork tenderloin) or poultry (like breast or
drumstick), you get less dioxin. Trimming fat and skin is a key strategy, and
that goes for the skin of fish, too.
And you can avoid much of the dioxin
in milk, cheese, yogurt, and ice cream by buying fat-free or low-fat
versions. Likewise, egg whites or the egg substitutes made out of egg whites
(like Egg Beaters) should have less dioxin.
But there's a catch: For
middle-aged or older adults, eating less dioxin now doesn't mean you've cut
the amount of dioxin in your body proportionately.
"If you cut your
dioxin intake in half, you haven't reduced your overall risk in half," says
Winters. "It's not that you are what you eat; you are what you ate. Your body
burden is a product of your lifetime consumption, and adults who make radical
shifts in their diets don't get immediate results. But reducing the intake
for children for their lifetimes is going to have more of an
effect.
"Many of us are still carrying the exposure from the 1950s and
'60s, when levels in the environment were much higher. My three-year-old
daughter will have much lower levels than mine when she grows up."
The
Good News
Today's children will be exposed to less dioxin because the EPA
has cracked down on the major sources.
"Our regulations will reduce
the dioxin emitted from municipal and medical waste incinerators and from
pulp and paper facilities by at least 95 percent," says Winters. Most of
these regulations will be fully in effect by 2002, but most incinerators and
paper-making plants are already meeting the levels set by the
regulations.
"For instance, in the late 1980s, municipal incinerators
were emitting more than 8,000 grams of dioxin a year in the U.S.," says
Winters. "Under the new regulations, they'll emit less than 12
grams.
"Now that we've addressed the major industrial sources, we're
shifting our focus to better understand how uncontrolled combustion, like
backyard trash-burning and forest fires, contributes dioxin to our food
supply."
THE DIOXIN IS CAST
The numbers for dioxin in freshwater
fish do not reflect current levels in the most popular farm-raised fish, like
catfish, salmon, and trout. What's more, the numbers are averages. Lower-fat
versions of these foods have less dioxin--and higher-fat versions have
more--than shown here.
Dioxins, PCBs,
Food (4 oz. unless &
Furans
otherwise indicated) (picograms)(1)
Freshwater fish
274
Marine shellfish 95
Marine fish 70
Beef 33
Pork
26
Poultry 18
Eggs (2) 13
Milk (1 cup) 11
Vegetable
oil (1 Tbs.) 1
(1) Because all foods contain a mixture of dioxins,
furans, and PCBs, the Environmental Protection Agency's draft estimates give
greater weight to the most harmful contaminants.
Source: Adapted from
"Draft Exposure and Human Health Reassessment
of 2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-p-Dioxin (TCDD) and Related Compounds,"
Volume 3, Chapter 3, Table 3-56, U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency (www.epa.gov/ncea/
pdfs/dioxin/part1and2.htm
, click on Volume 3, Chapter 3).
End of article.
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