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Friday, December 07, 2007

Is Your Water Bottle Killing You?

 
CTV News is reporting that Mountain Equipment Co-op is going to stop selling polycarbonate water bottles [Sporting goods chain drops bisphenol A products]. The bottles leach tiny amounts of a compound called bisphenol-A (BPA) and there have been reports out for many years that BPA is dangerous to your health. One of the products that's causing concern is Nalgene® water bottles with the number 7 in a triangle. These bottles are make of a type of polycarbonate called Lexan that contains BPA.

Concern about possible health problems due to BPA have been around for years. As is usually the case whenever the alarm is sounded, the environmentalist/green/healthfood movements will be the first to respond. They have been strongly opposed to plastic water bottles for some time. Their claims about chemical dangers tend to be exaggerated so it's often hard to know who to believe. (But see TheGreenGuide for a reasoned opinion [ The Bisphenol-A Debate: A Suspect Chemical in Plastic Bottles and Cans].)

Bisphenol A resembles steroid hormones such as estrogen and it may interact with estrogen receptors. Some studies have linked it to increased risk for cancer in humans. There's a long list of other possible diseases that are possibly associated with BPA including the usual suspects like autism. Many of these presumed linkages are not credible but there are enough real scientific studies to cause concern.

The Bisphenol A website is maintained by a consortium of chemical companies. They have a clear vested interest in proving that their plastics are safe. The site contains many interesting facts and figures about the controversy including this report just released by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) scientists in Atlanta, Georgia (USA) [Exposure of the U.S. Population to Bisphenol A and 4-tertiary-Octylphenol: 2003-2004]. The study shows that 93% of the population has detectable levels of BPA but these levels are far below the concentrations that produce harmful effects in animal studies.

What we need in situations like this is a neutral third party to evaluate the risks. Neither the chemical industry nor the healthfood industry can be trusted.

Along comes the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA). The Oct. 3, 2007 issue has an article summarizing the results of two recent studies [Expert Panels Weigh Bisphenol-A Risks].

The first study was done by a group of 38 scientists in November 2006.
After reviewing more than 700 studies, the group concluded that the molecular mechanism of BPA action in humans and animals is essentially identical, said Frederick S. vom Saal, PhD, of the Endocrine Disruptors Group at the University of Missouri-Columbia. Additionally, they determined that human and animal cells respond to similar doses of BPA and that the documented responses to very low-dose exposures can be explained by BPA's interaction with estrogen receptors on the cellular membrane.

"It's through these cell membrane receptors that doses below a part per trillion in cell culture can activate changes in cells," vom Saal said. "We're talking about levels of potency that are absolutely equivalent to estradiol."

The BPA doses that have been linked with health problems in animals are actually lower than the levels of free biologically active BPA that have been documented in human blood by a variety of techniques, such as ELISA testing and mass spectrometry, vom Saal said.

"The wide range of adverse effects of low doses of BPA in laboratory animals exposed both during development and in adulthood is a great cause for concern with regard to the potential for similar adverse effects in humans," according to the consensus statement. The statement calls for more research to probe BPA's effects in laboratory animals, wildlife, and humans.
The second study was done last August by a panel of the National Toxicology Program (NTP) Center for the Evaluation of Risks to Human Reproduction.
Although the panel rated the likelihood of human reproductive problems as "minimal" or "negligible," based on existing studies, it did have "some concern" that exposure could have neurological or behavioral effects in pregnant women, fetuses, infants, and children.

One reason for the differences in the groups' conclusions is that the NTP panel chose to exclude studies in which animals were exposed to BPA through injections. Members of the panel noted that most human exposure occurs through ingestion of the substance and that this translates to lower doses because the chemical is metabolized by the liver. But other researchers argue that such studies should have been included and that excluding them overlooks important evidence that exposure to low doses of BPA may lead to morphological and functional changes in the reproductive tracts of animals exposed early in development (Maffini MV et al. Mol Cell Endocrinol. 2006;254-255:179-186).
The bottom line is that there is enough concern to warrant trying to cut down on BPA intake. While the evidence suggests that it may be impossible to completely avoid exposure, you can still avoid the most likely sources—including those plastic water bottles.

It's probably time to switch to glass or metal, just to be on the safe side.


14 comments :

Anonymous said...

Okay. This kills me. Today at the gym there was general pandemonium because we all LOVE our Nalgene bottles. I personally have three different types of Nalgene and today I was forced to use a water fountain which likely has lead pipes and delivers warm water. I refuse to purchase bottled water because I believe it to be a human right, there are as yet no proven controls on the contents, and I'm a devotee of Maude Barlow. Guess I'll have to resort to mason jars. Not a very practical solution for our workout crowd. I'll be looking for the stainless steel thermos too! What next??????

Larry Moran said...

leslie asks,

What next??????

I've been telling you for years that working out is bad for your health.

Anonymous said...

New buildings don't have lead pipes. Old lead pipes are completely coated in scale and are not leaching lead. Municipal water systems are generally safer than bottled water because they are far more closely monitored. Polycarbonate does not leach significant amounts of BPA unless it is exposed to alkaline solutions. So keep the Nalgene bottles out of the dishwasher (use Joy or equivalent), drink from the fountain, and stop worrying so damn much. The stress *will* kill you.

Anonymous said...

Use polyethylene containers for drinking water. Both high density (HDPE) and low density (LDPE) are safe. Polyethylene is used for most plastic milk jugs and soft drink bottles. Sure it isn't as pretty as polycarbonate but who really needs a pretty canteen.

Jane said...

Here's what you need to do. Mason jars are way too impractical. Just finish off a bottle of your favorite wine, and then start using that bottle as your water bottle. Now that synthetic corks are replacing real corks, you can open and close your bottle as many times as you want to without having to worry about the stopper disintegrating. Just make sure that the synthetic cork doesn't contain any BPA. The workout ladies will love it, you'll start a new trend. You can even bring along little ice buckets with you to your workouts, so that in the end your water will be colder than ever before!

Torbjörn Larsson said...

There are technical solutions as well, if the market asks for them. Layered plastics are commonly used in other products. For all I know, a simple diffusion barrier between any polycarbonate and the liquid could suffice.

If transparency is a concern for cosmetic reasons, I believe different processes that creates and bonds silicon dioxide films to plastic, in essence thin and therefore flexible glass, has been validated in proof of principle tests many times over.

It would probably cut down on any tendencies to grow durable bacteria films as well and make the containers more useful for different acidic and flavored drinks. As I see it, it's a pity that people has never wanted to pay for quality here.

Niles said...

Heh - it's more the bacterial and fungal biofilms in the municipal water supply's pipes that worries me more than lead.

Still, better a little LPS and LTA than BPA!

Larry Moran said...

I still think the best solution is to avoid any strenuous exercise that requires you to replenish your water supply.

TheBrummell said...

Meh. The risks associated with assorted organics leeching at very low concentrations from plastics into my drinking water seem rather paltry and trivial compared to the much larger and less thought-provoking risks I experience. I could try to list some of those risks, but that's boring. I'll just mention the readily-available statistics on automobile accidents, especially as they relate to pedestrians.

Bayman said...

stainless steel is way more kick-ass anyway. i predict a new metal water-bottle trend

Anonymous said...

It's all bullshit unless someone publishes the amount leached from bottles. Right now it doesn't look like a lot.

I know someone at work who got a nifty Nalgene bottle as a gift and didn't want to use it because of the 'risk'. I was happy to take it off their hands.

Joe Dunckley said...

A few years ago I worked on the role of estrogen receptors in (amongst other things) cell cycle regulation in prolactinoma (pituitary tumour). It's difficult to find a response to BPA at realistic physiological concentrations, and most of the papers on BPA that I read were using a factor of ten or a hundred above physiological concentrations before they got a response.

Anonymous said...

Frederick S. vom Saal a neutral 3rd party? Good grief. Hardly. The sole source of BPA fears originated from him and a study of 14 his special mice, and no other lab has ever been able to replicate his findings.

http://www.quackwatch.org/04ConsumerEducation/babybottle.html

Anonymous said...

I remember hearing a report a few years back about the ubiquity of synthetic plasticizers and how they - and many synthetic pesticides - all had estrogenic activity.

The kicker was that all lab testing until that time always looked at the estrogenic activity of these compounds one at a time. But the news was that finally a researcher ( I think the fellow who discovered the problem in his yeasts work)looked at a plasticizer in combination with pesticides and found them to be *wildly* synergistic as far as estrogenic activity.

The report was really scary - and this was PBS. The speculation was that not only were cancer rates likely to be increased because of this estrogenic effect, but that it might even explain global sperm count drops.

These platicizers are supposedly everywhere - lining every tin can, glass bottle top liners, plastic milk jugs, etc.

How does this report about bisphenol-a relate to this report that I hopefully recall accurately?