By The National Poison Centre
In conjuction with the coming Environmental Week (Oct 21-27), it is good to
acknowledge that from Oct 1, chlordane - a chemical used mainly by pest
control companies for the treatment of termites - has been banned. This was
announced by the Malaysian Pesticide Board recently.
This move is indeed appropriate since the US Environmental Protection
Agency banned the chemical 10 years ago. substance is known for its
hazardous effects, both short- and long-term.
The ban on the manufacture and importation of chlordane however has also
raised some larger questions. Chlordane belongs to a group of chemicals
generally known as persistent organic pollutants or POPs for short.
They include similar organochlorine compounds like DDT, PCBs, furans,
heptachlor, aldrin, dieldrin and endrin. Some of these are still commonly
found in Malaysia. Many of them are used in or arise from industry,
agriculture and disease vector control.
They may also be created unintentionally as by-products. Because of their
persistent nature, over a period of time, their concentrations can increase to
levels that can eventually cause health effects.
The best known example is perhaps DDT, which has been widely used for
vector control for years. It has a low acute toxicity in humans and for a while
was regarded as 'safe'. However, it is now recognised that DDT has a
number of long-term side effects, including acting as an "endocrine
disruptor", namely in mimicking steroid hormones in the human body.
Moreover, the reports of high concentrations of DDT found in human breast
milk, especially in developing countries, point to the possibility of
environmental accummulation of DDT.
One prospective study, based on the New York University Women's Health
tudy, showed a significant association between body stores of the DDT
metabolite, DDE and breast cancer. On the other hand, endrin is even more
hazardous.
As a comparison, it is reported to be between two to four times more toxic
than DDT (LD 50: 16-43 mg/kg in rats), despite it being more readily
metabolised. Food contaminated with endrin has caused several clusters of
illness worldwide, especially with regard to poisoning in children.
But these are often overlooked because the symptoms resemble those of
encephilitis, making the cause not immediately apparent.
Yet another group of hazardous chemicals is the polychlorinated biphenyls
(PCBs), which has been around since 1929 but was banned more that 20
years ago in the US. PCBs are made up of more than 200 related
compounds, which, because of their many ideal characteristics, are used in
many industrial applications, especially as insulators.
The extent to which PCBs can affect us cannot be overemphasised since, up
to the time of their discovery as environmental and health hazards, they had
been produced and used extensively for more than three decades.
Like most POPs, PCBs too can accumulate in the fatty tissue and over the
years, PCBs have been detected in food samples. The higher the level of the
food chain, the greater the concentration of PCBs. Some have been passed
on to eggs (for birds and fishes) as well as milk (for mammals), and
eventually to humans.
Indeed, PCBs can be traced to humans through the consummation of
contaminated food and through breast milk in the case of infants. One report
submitted to the UK Department of Health stated that "breast-fed infants are
receiving up to 17 times the tolerable amounts of dioxins and polychlorinated
biphenyls (PCBs)."
One of the most alarming exposure effects of PCBs is the lowering of the IQ
level. It was recently confirmed that children exposed to low levels of PCBs
in the womb will grow up with low IQs, poor reading comprehension,
attention-deficit and memory problems.
Even at the age of 11, maternal exposures to PCBs were correlated with
lower overall IQ and lower verbal IQ score. About 11 per cent of the
children whose mothers had high exposure to PCBs now have IQs of 6.2
points lower than average. Other researchers suggested that PCBs interfere
with the thyroid hormones, which are essential for the development of the
brain.
Children exposed to PCBs in the womb at levels regarded as "background
levels" in the US have also been reported to experience the loss of muscle
tone, poor reflexes at birth, delays in psychomotor development from the
ages of six to 12 months, and diminished visual recognition memory at seven
months. Other findings include "balky, uncooperative behaviour".
All these invariably are related to the presence of PCBs in the environment --
be it in storage, landfills, sediment of lakes, rivers or even oceans -- apart
from the 70 per cent that are in use.
Given all these findings, it is therefore not suprising that a ban was imposed
on PCBs -- outlawing the manufacture, sale and distribution -- by the US
Congress as early as 1976, except in "totally enclosed" systems. Even then,
although the use of PCBs in heat transfer and hydraulic systems can be
regarded as "closed", there is always the risk of leakage and exposure.
Thus, while the banning of chlordane can be seen as a step in the right
direction, it is by not means the only substance of concern. We must
continue to weed out as many POPs as possible in the shortest time frame
until they no longer pose potential risks to the population.
In fact, in a recent WHO report (1997), which was part of the review five
years after the Earth Summit, considerable attention was given to POP. The
report commented that the use of such substances cannot be considered
sustainable. Increasing evidence of the long-range transport in the
environment of these substances and the consequent threats they pose has
prompted the international community to call for urgent global action to
reduce and eliminate the releases and emissions of these chemicals.
Among the 12 POPs under initial consideration for international action, DDT
is the only insecticide still in use for public health purposes, notably vector
control. DDT has had a major impact on the eradication or virtual eradication
of malaria from a number of countries, including Malaysia.
Even then, its use has declined following development of vector-resistance,
reduction in its global production and adverse recent findings. In other
words, POPs are fast losing their "popularity" and Malaysians should be
spared of any potential hazards that could arise from accessibility to such
substances.
The environment and health dangers of POPs
Source: The New Straits Times Press (Malaysia) Berhad
Monday, October 12, 1998