Home Bug Spray May Increase Parkinson's Risk
...it is the first study to show a significant
association between home pesticide use and the risk of developing Parkinson's disease
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[ MEMORIAL TO VICTIMS ]
Subject: Home Bug Spray May Increase Parkinson's Risk - Study
Date: Sun, 07 May 2000 08:14:33 -0400
From: Stephen Tvedten <steve@getipm.com>
Organization: Get Set Inc. (www.getipm.com)
To: Lyndon Hawkins <hawkins@empm.cdpr.ca.gov>
Senior Research
Scientist
State of California,
Department of Pesticide Regulation - Integrated Pest Management
Dear Lyndon, I thought you might like to read an article tying some of your least toxic "registered" POISONS to Parkinson's disease. Either click or read below: http://news.excite.com/news/r/000505/23/science-health-parkinsons - The 5/5/00 article is entitled: Home Bug Spray May Increase Parkinson's Risk-Study.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - People exposed to bug sprays in the home and garden may have a higher risk of Parkinson's disease, an incurable and fatal deterioration of the brain, researchers said on Friday.
The study, which is sure to cause controversy, is the first to show that exposure to pesticides in the home may lead to Parkinson's, although other studies have suggested that exposure to the chemicals at work is a risk.
Lorene Nelson, a neuroepidemiologist at Stanford University School of Medicine, and colleagues studied 500 people newly diagnosed with the disease which is characterized by shaking and a freezing of the muscles.
They told a meeting of the American Academy of Neurology in San Diego that people who had been exposed to pesticides were twice as likely to develop Parkinson's disease as people not exposed to pesticides.
"This study is the largest yet of newly diagnosed individuals with Parkinson's disease and it is the first study to show a significant association between home pesticide use and the risk of developing Parkinson's disease," Nelson said in a statement.
For their study they questioned 496 people who had been diagnosed with Parkinson's disease. Each patient was asked if they had used or been exposed to insecticides, herbicides, weed killers or fungicides in the home or garden.
They compared these surveys to those done by 541 people without Parkinson's.
Parkinson's patients were more than two times as likely to have been exposed to insecticides in the home. People exposed to herbicides also had a higher risk, but exposure to insecticides in the garden and to fungicides did not seem to be associated with the disease.
Parkinson's is caused when brain cells that produce an important neurotransmitter, or message-carrying chemical, are destroyed.
"Certain chemicals that an individual is exposed to in the environment may cause selective death of brain cells or neurons," Nelson said. "If we could understand why these neurons are being killed in certain circumstances, we can then try and prevent it."
She said much more study was needed before anyone could draw any conclusions about pesticides and Parkinson's.
"No specific guidelines regarding avoidance of
pesticides can be given at this time but, in general, this is an area of public
health importance that needs to be pursued," she said.
Well Lyndon, I remember when Ali - The Champ was
diagnosed with Parkinson's and we discussed then how often he had been exposed
to your "registered" POISONS. It
was my opinion then, as it is now, that the
advent of your "registered" POISONS created or greatly exacerbated
MANY health problems! When will it be "legal" (in your opinion) to use
safe and far more effective (unregistered) alternatives to actually control pest
problems in California?
Please!
TOP
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