Cognitive Deficits Via Poison Dioxin.
Other Diseases: Diabetes, Cancer.....

This page: http://www.geocities.com/fltaxpayer/endocrine/10cogni.html

General Note: Dioxin causes expensive disabilities like ADD/ADHD, Diabetes and Cancer. Eliminate endocrine disruptors like dioxin and save $4,000/year/household on unnecessarily high Medicare and private medical insurance, disability taxes and extra income taxes to make up for taxes not paid by unnecessarily disabled people.

"Dioxin And Health"
Rachel's Environment & Health Weekly #463
10/12/1995

The word "dioxin" stands for a group of chemicals
that occurs rarely, if ever, in nature.

A very large proportion of dioxin comes from human
sources.

Dioxin began accumulating in the environment around
1900 when the founder of Dow Chemical (in Midland,
Michigan) invented a way to split table salt into
sodium atoms and chlorine atoms, thus making large
quantities of "free chlorine" available for the first
time.[1] (Dow's chlorine is "free" in the sense of
"chemically unattached," not free in the sense of
"without cost.") Initially, Dow considered free chlorine
a useless and dangerous waste.

But soon a way was found to turn this waste into a
useful product, attaching chlorine atoms onto
petroleum hydrocarbons and thus creating, during the
1930s and 1940s, a vast array of "chlorinated
hydrocarbons." These new chemicals, in turn, gave rise
to many of today's pesticides, solvents, plastics, and so
forth.

Unfortunately, when these chlorinated hydrocarbons
are processed in a chemical plant, or are burned in an
incinerator, they release an unwanted byproduct
--dioxin --the most toxic family of chemiccals ever
studied.

Dioxin is released by paper mills, by metal smelters,
by many chemical plants, by many pesticide factories,
and by all incinerators.

According to Greenpeace chemist Pat Costner, the
biggest source of dioxin discharges into the
environment is factories that make the popular plastic,
PVC (polyvinyl chloride).[2] Industry and EPA (U.S.

Environmental Protection Agency) have known much
of the bad news about dioxin since at least the late
1970s, but have done little or nothing about it.

In 1991, the paper industry and the Chlorine Council
(a trade group) pressured EPA to relax the few dioxin
standards that EPA had set at the time; in response,
EPA has spent the last 4 years re-examining the
toxicity of dioxin, in preparation for deciding what to
do about it.

(See REHW #269, #270, #275.) EPA released a draft
of its 9-volume "dioxin reassessment" last year (see
REHW #390 and #391).

Yesterday, EPA's Science Advisory Board released its
own critique of the 9-volume "dioxin reassessment."[3]
So-called "conservatives" in Congress have attacked
Chapter 9 of EPA's dioxin reassessment --the chapter
that contains most of the chillingly bad news about
dioxin.

We reported in REHW #457 that Congress was
preparing to pillory EPA scientists in a public hearing;
that hearing has been delayed, and perhaps has been
scrapped completely.

"Conservatives" in Congress complain that Chapter 9
has not been adequately "peer reviewed." Last month
the main authors of EPA's Chapter 9 published --in a
peer-reviewed journal --their own conclusions about
the toxicity of dioxin.[4]

The basic message from these senior EPA scientists is
that dioxin is toxic to humans in surprisingly many ways,
and that the general public is not adequately protected from
ill effects by a traditional "margin of safety."

Public health policy usually aims to keep the public's
exposure to poisons at least 100 times below levels known
to harm humans or animals.

As we will see, this new report from EPA shows that
U.S. adults are already carrying around an average dioxin
burden in their bodies that is remarkably close to the
levels known to cause illness in humans or animals.

We want to note at the outset that ALL OF THE
RESULTS REPORTED HERE WERE TAKEN FROM
PEER- REVIEWED LITERATURE AND WERE
STATISTICALLY SIGNIFICANT.

All of the following information is taken from the new
EPA study.[4]


EPA'S LATEST FINDINGS:

EPA says the average U.S. citizen has no particular
exposure to dioxin besides what is routinely eaten in
food --mainly in red meat, fish, and dairy products.

This routine dietary exposure has produced an average
body burden that is estimated to be 13 nanograms of
dioxin per kilogram of body weight (ng/kg).

(A nanogram is a billionth of a gram; a gram is 1/28th
of an ounce. A kilogram is about 2.2 pounds.)

Ng/kg is equivalent to parts per trillion.


So 13 ng/kg seems tiny --and as an absolute quantity it is.

But compared to the amount that causes havoc in
dioxin-exposed animals and humans, 13 ng/kg
qualifies as a major public health problem, in our
opinion.

(EPA estimates that 5% of Americans --some 12.5
million people --have body burdens twice the average.)
Here are some effects of dioxin, as reported by
EPA:[4]


CHLORACNE:

Chloracne was the first disease associated with
exposure to dioxin, first described in 1897.

Chloracne appeared as an occupational problem in the
1930s among pesticide workers, and among workers
who manufactured industrial chemicals called PCBs
[polychlorinated biphenyls].

However, dioxin was not identified as the cause of
chloracne until about 1960.

(Dioxin was an unwanted contaminant of the
pesticides and PCBs.) Chloracne produces skin
eruptions, cysts and 'pustules' --like a very bad case of
teenage acne, except that the sores can occur all over
the body and in serious cases can last for many years.

To grasp the nature of a bad case of chloracne, we can
recall Dr. Raymond Suskind's description of one of
his patients, a white man who got chloracne from
dioxin exposure in a Monsanto chemical plant in
West Virginia in 1949: "...

he has given up all social and athletic functions and
remained in his house, according to his own
description, for months on end.

Several times he has been mistaken for a Negro and
forced to conform with the racial segregation customs
of the area.

This has happened on buses or in the theaters [sic],"
Suskind wrote.[5]

In laboratory animals, chloracne occurs at body
burdens as low as 23 ng/kg and as high as 13,900
ng/kg; in humans, chloracne has occurred at body
burdens as low as 96 ng/kg and as high as 3000 ng/kg.

This means that some humans get chloracne when
their dioxin body burden is only 7 times as high as the
body burden of the average person in the U.S. today.

In other words, there is not even a factor of 10
separating the average person from the possibility of
chloracne.

In fact, the EPA study cites examples of humans
getting chloracne with body burdens only 3 times as
high as the U.S. average.


CANCER:

There have been 5 peer-reviewed studies showing
cancer in humans exposed to dioxin.

The exposures occurred through accidents or through
routine activities at work.

These studies of humans show that, for some human
populations, the danger of cancer begins to rise
noticeably when the dioxin body burden reaches 109
ng/kg.

This means that a cancer effect in humans is evident
when the dioxin body burden reaches a point 8 times
as high as the average dioxin body burden in the U.S.
public.

Again, there is not a factor of even 10 separating the
average American from the possibility of cancer from
dioxin.


BEHAVIORAL EFFECTS-LEARNING DISORDERS:

Laboratory experiments on monkeys (marmosets)
reveal learning disabilities in young monkeys with a
dioxin body burden as low as 42 ng/kg.[6]

Thus learning disorders are evident in monkeys who
have a dioxin body burden only 3.2 times as high as
that of the average American.

Again, there is not a factor of even 10 separating the
average U.S. resident from the possibility of a dioxin
effect on the central nervous system.


DECREASED MALE SEX HORMONE:

Researchers at the National Institute of Occupational
Safety and Health (NIOSH) found reduced levels of
testosterone --male sex hormone --circulating in the
blood of dioxin-exposed male workers.[7]


Other sex hormone levels in these men were affected
as well.

If we can assume that dioxin exposure caused the
diminished testosterone levels, then some humans are
280 times as sensitive as rats are, from the viewpoint
of testosterone.

What seems most important is that these
dioxin-exposed workers had body burdens only 1.3
times the dioxin body burden of the U.S.
population.

Thus there is not even close to a factor of 10
separating the average U.S. male from the testosterone
effects seen in dioxin-exposed workers.

The reduction in testosterone levels was statistically
significant, but the reduction was small and the
measured levels still remained within the range that is
considered normal.


DIABETES:

In two studies, an increased incidence of diabetes has
been reported in dioxin-exposed Vietnam veterans; a
third study that reaches similar conclusions was
reportedly released last week by the U.S. Air Force.[8]

The body burdens that seem to produce an increase in
diabetes range from 99 to 140 ng/kg.

Thus the average American, with a body burden of 13
ng/kg, is a factor of 8 below the lowest level thought to
create a diabetes hazard.

Once again, there is not even a factor of 10 separating
the general public from the levels though to cause
health problems in dioxin-exposed people.


IMMUNE SYSTEM TOXICITY:

In monkeys (marmosets), changes in white blood cells
associated with the immune system can be measured at
dioxin levels of 10 ng/kg --25% below the level
already found in average Americans.

Mice with body burdens of 10 ng/kg --25% below the
amount already found in you and me -display an
increased susceptibility to infections by viruses,
presumably because their immune system has been
damaged.


SPERM LOSS AND ENDOMETRIOSIS:

Female rhesus monkeys with body burdens only 5
times as high as the U.S. average have a measurable
increase in the painful, debilitating disease of the
uterus, called endometriosis.

Endometriosis is increasing in U.S. women.
(REHW #364, #377.)

Male offspring of rats with a body burden only 5
times as high as the U.S. average have diminished
sperm production.

During the last 50 years, sperm production of men
through the industrialized world has dropped 50%.
(REHW #343, #432.)


CONCLUSION:

We have only scratched the surface of the bad news
that has accumulated about dioxin.

It is an astonishingly versatile and potent poison.

EPA, and the corporations that release dioxin into the
environment, have waffled and fudged for 20 years or
more.

The answer to this burgeoning public health problem is
clear, if not easy: over the next 20 years, we must ban
chlorine as an industrial feed stock and thus cut off the
source of all dioxins.

What other choice do we have?

Peter Montague

[1] Jack Weinberg, editor,
Dow Brand Dioxin
(Washington, D.C.: Greenpeace, September, 1995);
34 pages,
$15.00,
from Sanjay Mishra at Greenpeace:
(202) 319-2444.

[2] Pat Costner,
Pvc: a Primary Contributor to the U.s.
Dioxin Burden
(Washington, D.C.: Greenpeace, February, 1995);
$15.00;
available from Sanjay Mishra at Greenpeace:
(202) 319-2444.

[3] Copies of the Science Advisory Board's dioxin
critique are available, while supplies last, by phoning
(202) 260-8414.

[4] Michael J. DeVito and others,
"Comparisons of Estimated Human Body Burdens
of Dioxin like Chemicals and TCDD Body Burdens
in Experimentally Exposed Animals,"
Environmental Health Perspectives
Vol. 103,
No. 9 (September, 1995),
pgs. 820-831.

[5] Raymond R. Suskind,
Progress Report -Patients from Monsanto Chemical
Company,
Nitro, West Virginia,
APRIL, 1950
(Cincinnati, Ohio: Kettering Laboratory, April, 1950),
pg. 9.

[6] S.L. Schantz and others,
"Learning in monkeys exposed perinatally to
2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD)."
Neurotoxicology And Teratology
Vol. 11 (1989),
pgs. 13-19.

And see: R. Bowman and others,
"Behavioral Effects in Monkeys Exposed to
2,3,7,8-TCDD Transmitted Maternally During
Gestation and During Four Months of Nursing."
Chemosphere
Vol. 18 (1989),
pgs. 235-242.

[7] Grace M. Egeland and others,
"Total Serum Testosterone and Gonadotropins in
Workers Exposed to Dioxin,"
American Journal of Epidemiology
Vol. 139 (1994),
pgs. 272-281.

[8] Reuters reported October 6 on a new 20-year
study.



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ED Briefing Book Main Pages:
| Endocrine Disruption Briefing Book | | Attachment List, ED Briefing Book |

Attachment Pages:
| ADD/ADHD | | Children-Developmental Damage | | Symptoms, Physical-Cognitive | | Diabetes | | Porphyria-LiverSpots | | Porphyria-Suppressed Detox | | Thyroid Disruptions | | Cancer, et al | | Cancer, et al |

| Bethune School Dioxin | | Whitehouse School Scandal | | Belgium Govt. Topples | | 314 Toxic Chemicals | | 3700 Porphyrinogenic Chemicals | | Professional Dioxin Reports | | Industry View Dioxin | | Dust Carries Toxics (Dioxin) |

Cost Estimates, For Medical & Social Problems: |
Overview 5 most costly dioxin diseases |

ED Briefing Book Main Pages:
| Endocrine Disruption Briefing Book | | Attachment List, ED Briefing Book |

Attachment Pages:
| ADD/ADHD | | Children-Developmental Damage | | Symptoms, Physical-Cognitive | | Diabetes | | Porphyria-LiverSpots | | Porphyria-Suppressed Detox | | Thyroid Disruptions | | Cancer, et al | | Cancer, et al |

| Bethune School Dioxin | | Whitehouse School Scandal | | Belgium Govt. Topples | | 314 Toxic Chemicals | | 3700 Porphyrinogenic Chemicals | | Professional Dioxin Reports | | Industry View Dioxin | | Dust Carries Toxics (Dioxin) |

Cost Estimates, For Medical & Social Problems: |
Overview 5 most costly dioxin diseases |

Additional Overview Info:
| PCB Toxicity by CDC | | 48% Graduation Rate Jax FL | | EDSTAC |
| EPA Dioxin Report Chap 9, Health Effects | | EPA 1994 Dioxin Report, other chapters | | Court Affidavit of Dioxin Damage | | Solutions to Dioxin Problem |


Send questions to:
| [email protected] | | [email protected] |

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