Read the Fine Print—pesticides, solvents, and cell-phone radiation—important male-mediated teratogens and endocrine disruptors

In advising women about important prenatal risk factors, clinicians have tended to focus on classical teratogens, such as alcohol, tobacco smoking, lead, solvents, and ionizing radiation that work after conception to damage offspring. But, these and other compounds and physical agents can also affect reproductive health by impairing the capacity of men to produce healthy children or adversely impacting the health of those that are conceived. The term male-mediated teratogen has been used to characterize a number of environmental factors that affect the ability of men to become fathers as well as the health of the children they produce. Among the male-linked factors that have been demonstrated through experimental and epidemiological studies to result in damage to progeny are: cocaine, alcohol, some pesticides and solvents such as DBCP and trichloroethylene, and heavy metals such as lead and mercury. Not surprisingly, these same agents also function as direct teratogens that work through classical routes of placental uptake to impair embryonic development.
Another growing environmental health hazard to male reproductive health has received little attention. Microwave radiation from cellphones is both a classical teratogen and male-mediated teratogen, and should therefore be deemed an endocrine disrupting agent that merits serious attention from public health policy makers and clinicians. In addition, there is growing indication that cellphone radiation can also function as an epigenetic carcinogen, although it may also be a direct carcinogen. Epigenetic carcinogens are those that increase cancer risk without damaging DNA, by affecting patterns of methylation, or repair, or through other non-structural impacts.
Most people and their clinicians are not aware that fine print warnings have been issued with smart phones advising that people not keep phones in their pockets and avoid exposure to the pregnant abdomen or those of teenagers. A cellphone is a two-way microwave radio with intermittent and destabilizing pulses, unlike microwave ovens that steadily operate at the same frequencies. The weak and erratic microwave radiation from cellphones and tablets cannot directly break the bonds that hold molecules together, but does disrupt DNA, weaken the brain’s protective barrier, and releases highly reactive and damaging free radicals.
The scientific grounds underlying these warnings are provided by a series of studies from scientists in Finland, Russia and Turkey, including the work of
Experimental work completed by teams working with two experts in male reproductive health, Prof. Ashok Agarwal of the Cleveland Clinic and by Sir Robert John Aitken of Australia’s Newcastle University, have shown that cellphone radiation exposed human sperm die three times faster, swim significantly more poorly, become more deformed and develop significantly more damage to sperm DNA. This past fall, Conrado Avendano and a team Argentinian scientists in Cordoba showed that semen from healthy men die twice as fast when placed under a laptop that is connected to wireless radiation.
With one in every five couples reportedly have serious problems reproducing, the avoidance of direct exposure to the reproductive organs from cellphones, wireless-connected laptops and other closely held wireless devices should become standard medical advice.
Experimental Evidence of Reproductive Toxicity |
|||
AGENTS |
IMPACTS |
||
Male Mediated Teratogen |
Endocrine Disruptor |
Epigenetic Carcinogen/Obesogen |
|
DBCP1 |
Decreases sperm motility and spermatogenesis |
Yes, disrupts estrous cycle |
EC-Yes, and mutagenic Obesogen - unknown |
Bisphenol A (BPA) |
Unknown, however is a female mediated teratogen in combination with genistein 3 |
Yes, effects prostrate gland of fetuses, infants and children 2 |
EC – Yes, as classified by the IARC, has been shown to induce and promote several cancer types 4 Obesogen – Possibly, some estrogenic properties and hormonal activities may cause it to act as one 4 |
Tin Compounds5 |
Modest however not detrimental effects, further research needed |
Yes, in both vertebrates and invertebrates |
EC- inadequate information to properly assess 9 Obesogen – combined with factors such as the high fat Western Diet, yes |
Cell Phone/ Laptop /Microwave Radiation |
Yes, decreases sperm motility and increases DNA Fragmentation 6 |
Yes, produces physiological responses similar to that of stress hormones 7 |
EC- Likely Classified by IARC and WHO as possibly carcinogenic 8 Obesogen – unknown |
REFERENCES
1. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7015501
2. http://www.fda.gov/NewsEvents/PublicHealthFocus/ucm197739.htm#current
3. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20299547
4. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2442886/
5. http://endo.endojournals.org/content/147/6/s50.full
6. http://www.alerte.ch/images/stories/documents/etudes/wififertilite.pdf
8. http://www.iarc.fr/en/media-centre/pr/2011/pdfs/pr208_E.pdf
9.http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/toxprofiles/tp55-c8.pdf
Acknowledgement: This paper was prepared with the assistance of Spencer Schecht and Jeremy Ramlagan
To be seen on Physican's for Social Responsibility.
Can Cell Phones Cause Cancer?
-TIME Magazine
In loving memory of David Servan-Schreiber, who passed away July 24, 2011

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