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May 17, 2002
Montreal tests show harmful
effects of contaminants
Rats fed chemicals commonly
found in country foods give birth to pups with severe reproductive defects
JANE
GEORGE
Contaminants in Arctic
foods have been found to cause small balls in rats and stunt their sexual growth
and this toxic cocktail could be causing the same kind of damage in human
beings.
Exposure to contaminants
found in the Arctic harms the fetal and reproductive development of rats, according
to two studies conducted by researchers at the Montreal University Health Centre.
Rats are reliable models
for human beings in laboratory tests for medications and other substances, so
the studies troubling results could be significant for northern residents.
The contaminants that researchers
in one study gave to pregnant rats contained chemicals commonly found in Arctic
fish and wildlife.
Dr. Bernard Robaire, from
McGill Universitys pharmacology department, said he chose this particular
combination of chemicals because it contained the kind of chemicals that Inuit
regularly consume in a country foods diet.
These chemicals originate
in paints, cleaning solvents and pesticides. Many of these substances have already
been banned, but some are still in use.
Theyve travelled
into the polar food chain through the water or wind, accumulating in the fat
of marine mammals, birds and fish.
Researchers gave rats a
souped-up amount of these toxins.
"During pregnancy,
they gave them from 10 to 1000 times the average level found," Robaire
said. "Then, we looked at the effect on the fetus, such as the size of
the testes."
Robaire said tests showed
genetic changes in the fetus, including testes and ovaries with genetic abnormalities.
As the rats grew, researchers also noted a late onset of puberty.
Robaire said these two
factors could damage fertility.
Robaire said his study
focused on the reproductive system of rats, although previous studies have found
these contaminants can also damage the nervous system of animals and people.
A related study conducted
at the Montreal University Health Centre looked at how a compound used in marine
paint, called tributyltin or TBT, affects rats.
TBT is effective in killing
algae and insects on marine vessels.
But its toxic residue accumulates
in sediments, especially in cold-water sediments, where, even in very small
amounts, it causes reproductive damage to bottom-feeders such as oysters and
mussels.
Pregnant rats receiving
TBT in the study had pups showing damage to their immune systems and reproductive
systems.
Without more studies, Robaire
said its impossible to predict what happens to the reproductive systems
of human beings when they consume comparable levels of these chemicals.
Unfortunately, theres
no more money in the federal Toxic Substance Research Initiative for a follow-up
study that would try and relate these results to people despite the notable
impact of these contaminants on rats.
"It suggests that
a study should be done on it," Robaire said.
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