Untitled Document
Scientists on Tuesday reported that perchlorate, a toxic component of rocket fuel,
was contaminating virtually all samples of women's breast milk and its levels
were found to be, on average, five times greater than in cow's milk.
The contaminant, which originates mostly at defense industry plants, previously
had been detected in various food and water supplies around the country. But
the study by Texas Tech University's Institute of Environmental and Human Health
was the first to investigate breast milk.
The findings concern health experts because infants and fetuses are the most
vulnerable to the thyroid-impairing effects of the chemical.
Breast milk from 36 women in 18 states, including California, was sampled,
and all contained traces of perchlorate.
Perchlorate blocks the nutrient iodide and inhibits thyroid hormones, which
are necessary for brain development and cellular growth of a fetus or infant.
A baby with impaired thyroid development may have neurological defects that
result in lower IQ or learning disabilities.
The researchers recommended that pregnant and nursing women block the effects
of perchlorate by taking iodine supplements as a precaution.
At the levels they found in breast milk, the scientists reported that 1-month-old
infants would take in enough perchlorate to exceed a safe level, called a reference
dose, that was established last month by a panel of the National Academy of
Sciences.
"It is obvious that the NAS safe dose … will be exceeded for the
majority of infants," the report published in the journal Environmental
Science and Technology says. Some infants would ingest so much that they would
exceed levels that altered the brain structure of animals in laboratory tests.
The findings come as the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is developing
an enforceable limit on the amount of perchlorate in drinking water based on
the recommendations of the National Academy of Sciences panel. Currently there
is no national standard.
"This is not just another study," said Renee Sharp, a senior analyst
at the Environmental Working Group, which advocated a strict national standard.
"It ends the questions about whether women are passing along perchlorate
to their kids through breast milk, and the sky-high levels the scientists found
put more than half the kids over the safe levels the NAS now recommends."
Environmentalists have urged the EPA to set its standard based on the body
weight and perchlorate intake of an infant rather than an adult. Toxicologists
said that would probably mean a standard of a few parts per billion. Pentagon
officials have said that would shut down many water systems across the country
and cost the military and its contractors billions of dollars in cleanup costs.
They have instead lobbied for a standard of about 200 parts per billion based
on thyroid studies of adults.
The new findings "will practically force EPA officials to write a drinking
water standard that protects infants — not just healthy adults,"
Sharp said.
California has set its own public health goal of 6 parts per billion but it
is not an enforceable limit.
The Texas Tech researchers, led by Andrea Kirk, reported that the perchlorate
in breast milk was not linked to the water the mothers drank. Instead, the main
source was probably food, which apparently was tainted by irrigation water.
The finding that perchlorate is pervasive in breast milk and reaches high
levels is somewhat of a surprise to toxicologists, because, unlike many other
industrial chemicals, it does not build up in tissues over time.
Instead, it appears that the amount passed on to the infant in breast milk
is determined by what the mother has just eaten.
Perchlorate levels are particularly high in the lower Colorado River, which
supplies irrigation water to almost 2 million acres of cropland. The river,
government officials believe, has been tainted by leaks from a Kerr-McGee plant
near Lake Mead.
The highest perchlorate levels, one reaching 92 parts per billion, were found
in the breast milk of two women from New Jersey. The average was 10.5 parts
per billion, compared to 2 parts per billion in cow's milk. Forty-six of 47
samples of dairy milk purchased in 11 states, including California, contained
perchlorate.
Sujatha Jahagirdar, clean-water advocate at Environment California, an advocacy
group, said it was "absolutely appalling" that a component of rocket
fuel was found in mother's milk.