[Pharmwaste] Study seeks to explain drop in male births
DeBiasi,Deborah
dldebiasi at deq.virginia.gov
Tue Apr 10 10:22:52 EDT 2007
http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/07100/776561-114.stm
Study seeks to explain drop in male births
Tuesday, April 10, 2007
By David Templeton, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Each year in the United States, more boys are born than girls, but a
30-year decline in the percentage of male births is raising concern.
A new study says environmental and other factors may be affecting
conception of male embryos and hindering the health of male fetuses.
Devra Lee Davis, director of the Center for Environmental Oncology at
the University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute, said her study, which
included researchers from the United States and Japan, shows that "male
reproductive health is in trouble."
Sperm determines gender, so problems with male health can reduce the
number of male babies conceived.
Since 1970, in the United States, there have been 135,000 fewer white
male births than historic patterns would indicate, Dr. Davis said. The
birthrate of white males has dropped from an average of 105.5 males to
every 100 females in 1970 to 104.6 males per 100 females in 2001.
The decline in male birthrate was even greater in Japan. And while the
birthrate of African-American males has not declined in 30 years, the
ratio of male births to female births remains significantly lower than
the ratio for whites, the study states.
Yet another concern is that the male proportion of fetal deaths has
increased in the United States.
Although the study focused on Japanese and U.S. birthrates because the
two nations have detailed data on birth rates and deaths, researchers
suspect a similar problem in all industrialized nations. Reasons for the
trend are still under study, but evidence points to exposure to
environmental contaminants of various kinds.
"There has been a syndrome in industrialized nations of increased
testicular cancer, reduced testosterone levels and reduced sperm count,"
said Dr. Davis, an epidemiologist.
Other studies have found that military recruits show a reduction in
sperm count, and that testicular cancer has increased by 50 percent and
is affecting ever-younger men, she said.
Exposure to carcinogens, estrogen and other environmental risks causes
changes in the human endocrine system and disrupts normal reproduction,
she said. Changes in parental age at time of conception, obesity,
assisted methods of reproduction and nutrition could represent other
factors.
Determining the causes of changing gender patterns "merits serious
concern," the study concludes.
For now, the overall reduction in the male population is nothing
notable, but the causes are "something we need to find out and act
upon," Dr. Davis said.
Annie Sasco, a cancer epidemiologist in Bordeaux, France, who has read
the study, said people should avoid exposure to environmental
contaminants, including growth hormones in American-grown beef.
She also recommended avoiding pesticides and contaminants in plastics
that can produce a hormonal effect and have impact on sex ratio.
"This study should tell us that if you don't want to see diseases
increase, we should be more stringent with contamination of the
environment and with products that are carcinogens or endocrine
disrupters," Dr. Sasco said. "There is a need for regulatory aspects to
reduce the presence of these contaminants in what we eat, breathe and
are exposed to."
The study says one in every four to five couples nowadays reports
difficulty with reproduction. There also is mounting evidence that
exposure to contaminants on the job, along with other workplace issues,
can affect the DNA of sperm, increasing the tendency of men to father
children with birth defects.
"We hope this [study] will be a call to look more closely at health
problems of young men and protect them at the time before they want to
become fathers," Dr. Davis said.
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(David Templeton can be reached at dtempleton at post-gazette.com or
412-263-1578. )
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Deborah L. DeBiasi
Email: dldebiasi at deq.virginia.gov
WEB site address: www.deq.virginia.gov
Virginia Department of Environmental Quality
Office of Water Permit Programs
Industrial Pretreatment/Toxics Management Program
Mail: P.O. Box 1105, Richmond, VA 23218 (NEW!)
Location: 629 E. Main Street, Richmond, VA 23219
PH: 804-698-4028
FAX: 804-698-4032
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