Pyrethrin Can Cause Acute Asthma Attacks
It has a low toxicity in humans, but it can cause skin rash, upper respiratory tract irritation, and, in rare cases, potentially life-threatening asthma attacks, according to published reports.
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Subject: Your "Registered" POISONS Cause Acute Asthma Attacks----
Date: Thu, 24 Aug 2000 07:58:10 -0400
From: Stephen Tvedten <steve@getipm.com>
Organization: Get Set Inc. (www.getipm.com)
To: Paul Helliker <phelliker@cdpr.ca.gov>
Director, State of
California, Department of Pesticide Regulation
Dear
Mr. Helliker, I
thought you might like to read an article that appeared Friday August 18 2:02 PM
ET - entitled:
Common insecticide ingredient may cause allergic reactions.
By Charnicia E. Huggins.
NEW
YORK (Reuters Health) - While household insecticides may be
effective at getting rid of pesky little creatures, certain ingredients
such as pyrethrin
may trigger allergic reactions including acute asthma attacks in humans,
according to one case report.
An
11-year-old girl with a 5-year history of asthma gave her dog a bath using a
shampoo that contained 0.2% pyrethrin. Within 10 minutes, she developed severe
shortness of breath with wheezing and was immediately taken to the hospital.
Despite aggressive treatment by healthcare workers, she died of respiratory
arrest less than 3 hours after her exposure to the shampoo.
The
researchers note that the pyrethrin shampoo appeared to be the trigger for the
girl's asthma attack because the dog had been in the family home for several
years, and the girl had suffered a mild asthma attack when she was exposed to
the shampoo two years previously.
Pyrethrin
is an insecticide ingredient prepared from pyrethrum flowers, ``plants of the
Compositae family, which includes daisies and chrysanthemums,'' notes Dr.
Sheldon L. Wagner in a letter published in the August issue of the Western
Journal of Medicine. It has a low toxicity in humans, but it can cause skin
rash, upper respiratory tract irritation, and, in rare cases, potentially
life-threatening asthma attacks, according to published reports.
Yet
pyrethrin is not ``currently classified as (an allergen) by the Environmental
Protection Agency,'' Wagner writes. Due to the extraction process of pyrethrin
from pyrethrum, pyrethrin ''may contain small, but still allergenic, amounts of
the impurities found in (pyrethrum),'' he explains.
Pyrethrum
is still being marketed as an insecticide and it is a known allergen, but the
label does not warn the public or physicians of this fact, Wagner told Reuters
Health.
Wagner
suspects that pyrethrin may also cause allergies. This may be a cause for
concern because of its increasingly frequent use in homes and its easy
accessibility by the public, he cautions. ``Manufacturers are not required by
the Environmental Protection Agency to state on the label that the pyrethrum
formulations are allergens,'' he adds.
In
light of the circumstances surrounding the 11-year-old girl's death, healthcare
professionals faced with respiratory illness or skin allergies of an unknown
cause should consider the ''possibility of an acute allergic reaction occurring
from the use of any currently marketed pyrethrum insecticide,'' Wagner advises.
``This
case suggests that physicians should also be alert to formulations marketed as
pyrethrin,'' Wagner stresses.
Furthermore,
consumers who use pyrethrum or pyrethrin insecticides ``should be aware...of the
possibility of an allergic reaction the same way if they knew they were allergic
to poison ivy or poison oak or ragweed,'' Wagner stated in an interview.
Pyrethrin
is currently under consideration for reregistration by the Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA)--a process that will be concluded by 2002, according to
an EPA spokesperson. The EPA's reregistration program ``ensures that older
pesticides meet contemporary health and safety standards and product labeling
requirements, and that their risks are mitigated.''
SOURCE:
Western Journal of Medicine 2000;173:86-87.
Well
Mr. Helliker, I think that the SILENCE about the dangers of using your
"registered" POISONS should be made public.
What do you think?
I have never heard of anyone dying because they used dish soap - but,
from your continued SILENCE I assume dish soap is still not "legal"
for trained and licensed pest control operators to use to actually control pest
problems in California?
Why?
Respectfully,
Stephen L. Tvedten
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