Exposure to Agent Orange (herbicide) during the Vietnam War is still linked to hormonal imbalance in women and their breastfeeding babies.
Dioxin or Agent orange - A Vietnam war herbicide can still be responsible for hormonal imbalances in mother and their breastfeeding children decades later, found a study conducted by Kanazawa University in Japan. Previous research has shown a link between exposure to herbicides that contain chemicals called dioxins (Agent Orange) and prostate cancer in men.
‘A three-fold increase of mother to baby transmission of DHEA (Dehydroepiandrosterone) hormone was observed through the umbilical blood and breast milk’
Agent Orange is one of the dioxin-contaminated herbicides that were sprayed during the Vietnam War and used in different industrial and agricultural activities.Their use has resulted in hotspots of dioxin contamination, with concentrations of the chemical two to five-fold higher in affected areas in southern Vietnam than in non-contaminated regions.
Dioxins are endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) - they interfere with how hormones send messages to each other around the body.
They also have been implicated in causing birth defects such spina bifida( improper development of spinal cord ), cardiovascular defects etc, cancer, and neuro-developmental disorders such as Parkinson disease (PD).
In particular, dioxins affect a hormone called Dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA), which is responsible for male and female characteristics in humans. Dioxins put these out of balance, leading to health problems and disfigurement.
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"Decades of industrial development and chemicals released during the Vietnam War have led to high levels of dioxins in the soil and atmosphere, and people are absorbing these chemicals from the food they eat and the air they breathe," said Prof. Teruhiko Kido. "We know dioxins have an impact on our hormones, so we wanted to see whether they were being passed from mother to baby."
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Despite the natural elimination of dioxins in the past five decades, environmental and human samples around this area still contain high levels of the chemical. The scientists analyzed the level of dioxin in the mother’s breast milk and tested non-invasive samples of saliva from the babies for levels of the hormone DHEA (Dehydroepiandrosterone).
The results showed a nearly three-fold increase in DHEA in babies from the dioxin hotspot compared to non-contaminated regions. This was linked to dioxins being transferred from mother to baby through their umbilical blood and breast milk.
"Our study confirms how sensitive and vulnerable children are to the environmental toxins their parents and even earlier generations have been exposed to," said Prof. Kido. "There is a lot we still don’t know about, what this means for children’s health and what the long-term impact could be, but studying people in these dioxin hotspots gives researchers the chance to understand the implications better."
Prof. Kido and the team plan to follow the children in the study up to the age of 10 to assess more accurately the endocrine impact of dioxin exposure during pregnancy and early life. Nearly three-fold increase of DHEA (Dehydroepiandrosterone) hormone in dioxin hot-spot area babies were observed, along with confirmation of mother to baby dioxin transmission activity through umbilical blood and breast milk.
Source-Eurekalert