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Reproductive Effects of Pesticide Exposure

Reproductive Effects of Pesticide Exposure. Pesticide Health Effects Medical Education Database (PHEMED). Reproductive Impact. Menstrual Cycles Birth defects Time to pregnancy Small for Age at Birth Miscarriages. Menstrual Cycle Changes.

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Reproductive Effects of Pesticide Exposure

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  1. Reproductive Effects of Pesticide Exposure Pesticide Health Effects Medical Education Database (PHEMED)

  2. Reproductive Impact • Menstrual Cycles • Birth defects • Time to pregnancy • Small for Age at Birth • Miscarriages

  3. Menstrual Cycle Changes • Women using pesticides have 1.5 x increased odds of * • Longer cycles • Missing a period • Hormonally active pesticides increase odds of missed periods, long cycles, bleeding mid cycle. • Lindane • Atrazine • Mancozeb or Maneb Source: Farr SL, Cooper GS, Cai J, Savitz DA, Sandler DP. Pesticide use and menstrual cycle characteristics among premenopausal women in the Agricultural Health Study. (2004). American Journal of Epidemiology, 160(12):1194-204.

  4. Birth Defects:Study Design Issues • Indirect exposure measurements without biomarkers: • Work records • Places of residence • Databases • Questionnaires • Only cases that survive birth are counted (miscarried fetuses?)

  5. Congenital Anomalies • Consistent findings with • Limb reductions - Uro-genital defects • Central nervous system • Cleft palates/lips: marginal significant w/maternal exposure • Eye – heart defects • Not definitive until better exposure analysis with the US Children’s Health Study Source: Sanborn M, Cole D, Kerr K, Vakil C, Sanin LH, Bassil K. Pesticides Literature Review. Ontario College of Family Physicians. Toronto 2004.

  6. Time to Pregnancy • Studies suggest that occupational exposure increase time needed to become pregnant • 20%  in women engaged in pesticide activities + husband also engaged in same– but imprecise due to small numbers • Associated with dicamba, glyphosate, 2,4-D, thiocarbamates, OP’s although not statistically significant Source: Curtis KM, Savitz DA, Weinberg CR, Arbuckle TE. The effect of pesticide exposure on time to pregnancy. Epidemiology. 1999 Mar;10(2):112-7.

  7. Small for Age at Birth • Probable link • Fetal and maternal blood samples for OP by-products and newborn lengths • Chlorpyrifos and diazinon[by-products measured in fetal and maternal blood]associated to lower birth weight and length* * Whyatt RM et al. Biomarkers in assessing residential insecticide exposures during pregnancy and effects on fetal growth.Tox Applied Pharm 206 (2): 246-254 AUG 7 2005

  8. Spontaneous Abortions • Studies suggest an association • Critical exposure windows and certain pesticides • One - four months before conception • Non use of PPE increased risk 5 fold in one study • Study method problems • No data on miscarriage rates in general population • High % go undetected • ?? Role of other farm toxins (animal viruses, heavy metals) largely unknown in studies Sources: Arbuckle et al 1999 and 2001; Garry VF et al 2002

  9. Low Sperm Count • Characteristic of Dibromochloropropane (DBCP) nematocide exposure • Occurs with exposure to kepone

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