“Breast milk is the optimal nutritional source for any child and must be protected as it is a vehicle of environmental contaminants,” said Maria Elisabeth Street, M.D., Ph.D., associate professor and Director of the Division of Pediatric Endocrinology at the University of Parma and University Hospital of Parma, Parma, Italy. “Infancy represents a critical window of exposure since effects are magnified at this age with damage becoming evident after many years.”
The researchers measured exposure to more than 50 different chemicals, including bisphenols (BPA), polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, phthalates and metabolites, parabens, polar pesticides and pyrethroids.
One by one #
BPA was commonly found in breast milk one month after birth (51.2%) and at six months postpartum (49.8%). Nearly a third of the infants had BPA in their urine samples following birth. The number increased to 67.6% when the infants were 6 months old.
Bisphenol S (BPS) was found in breast milk one month after birth (10.7%), at six months after birth (18.3%), and in infant urine samples at birth (22.4%) and at six months after birth (41.2%).
Most polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons were rarely detected in breast milk, but several were consistently found in urine (up to 27.7%).
Methylparaben (MePB) and ethylparaben (EtPB) were most commonly found one month (51.2%; 42.3%) and six months postpartum (56.2%; 52.6%) in breast milk, and increased in urine samples over time.
Glufosinate was detected in breast milk one month after birth (27.4%) and three months (31.9%) after birth, and in urine samples at birth (44.7%) and at six months of age (38.2%).
Phthalates, including dibutyl phthalate (DBP), were found in 90.2% of breast milk samples at one month postpartum and 86.5% at six months postpartum. Levels in urine samples increased from 30.3% at birth to 79.4% at 6 months of age.
Studies found exposure to these chemicals were linked to neurodevelopmental issues, hormonal activation at birth, and androgenization, or the development of male reproductive characteristics. EDC exposure also can alter growth, weight and obesity, Street said.
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