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Pesticides Directly Correlated With Increased ADHD Cases in Children

Submitted by on September 18, 2011 – 1:37 am4 Comments

A large new study linked a compound found in pesticides, solvents, and plastics to increased ADHD in children. Most pesticides, herbicides and many solvents and plasticizers use organophospates as the basis, which shut down enzymes crucial to the nervous system.

The highest amount of pesticides are right on our dinner plates. The research confirms that organic is the way to go to ensure that unborn and young children aren’t likely to develop ADHD. Dr. Phil Landrigan of Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York said, “ It’s been shown that people who switch to an organic diet knock down the levels of pesticide by-products in their urine by 85 to 90 percent.”

~Health Freedoms

Levels of pesticides commonly encountered across the country in food as well as around the home are significantly increasing children’s risk of developing attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), and could be causing an increase in the number of children living with the condition, according to new research published in the journal Pediatrics.

Organophosphates form the basis for many pesticides and herbicides, and they’re also used as solvents and plasticizers. They work by irreversibly inactivating an enzyme called acetylcholinesterase, which is essential to nerve function in humans, insects, and animals. While organophosphates replaced an earlier class of compounds called organochlorides (including DDT) because they degrade more quickly, they have a far higher level of toxicity.

An earlier study reported in Environmental Health Perspectives focused on the impact of in-utero exposure to organophosphate pesticides among more than 300 Mexican-American children in the agricultural Salinas Valley in California. The children were checked at age three-and-a-half, and then again at age five. Researchers measured the quantities of breakdown products from these pesticides in the mothers’ urine twice during pregnancy. Then they looked at the children to see if there was evidence of ADHD symptoms. They found that the children whose mothers had higher levels of pesticide products during pregnancy were much more likely to exhibit ADHD symptoms by age five, and this was especially true for boys.

“It’s mainly exposure through food. Diet is the driver,” says pediatrician and public health expert Phil Landrigan, MD, professor and chair of the department of community and preventive medicine at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York City. “For most people, diet is the predominant source. It’s been shown that people who switch to an organic diet knock down the levels of pesticide by-products in their urine by 85 to 90 percent.”

Canadian researchers used data collected from nearly 1,140 children participating in the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, including pesticide by-products found in urine. They found that in that group, 119 children met the criteria for ADHD.

Children with substantially higher levels of a breakdown product of neurotoxic organophosphate pesticides were twice as likely to be diagnosed with ADHD. The university researchers conclude that parents should buy organic for their kids. Numerous other researchers stress the importance of women eating organic at least six months before conception and throughout pregnancy, too.

This isn’t the first study that has linked this class of pesticides to human health problems. However, other studies looked at farmers or others who work closely with pesticides day in and day out. This study is the first to look at everyday exposure levels in children from around the country. And as it turns out, U.S. kids are exposed to harmful levels of pesticides in their food, day in and day out.

This study looked at organophosphates in particular, ones designed to attack the neurological systems of pests (unfortunately, they harm humans, too). There are about 40 organophosphate pesticides registered with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and most people’s exposure to them comes through food, drinking water, and residential pesticide use, according to the EPA.

The harmful chemicals are widespread: A 2008 U.S. Pesticide Residue Program Report found detectable concentrations of one organophosphate alone, malathion, in 28 percent of frozen blueberries, 25 percent of strawberries, and 19 percent of celery sampled. (Malathion is also commonly sprayed out of airplanes and onto communities as part of mosquito-control programs. Organophosphate pesticides, also found in some flea and tick products, have been tied to childhood leukemia, and are believed to be partially responsible for colony collapse disorder, which is killing off honeybees (who pollinate our food crops) at unprecedented rates.

How to protect yourself, and your family:

• Eat whole organic. Environmental Working Group’s “Dirty Dozen” list names the produce varieties contaminated with the most different pesticides. It’s best to buy those fruits and vegetables organic whenever possible. However, other produce and grains also contain harmful pesticides of them, too. In fact, processed foods may contain higher pesticide levels because two common ingredients—genetically engineered corn and soy—have been genetically manipulated to withstand higher pesticide sprayings (which, as it turns out, isn’t working, and is actually causing superweeds). Use our tips to save money when buying organic.

• Beware of other exposures. Pesticides, by nature, are designed to kill, and the ones homeowners used around the house are dangerous, too, Dr. Landrigan explains. Instead of spraying your lawn or home, use organic gardening methods and practice nontoxic bug control.

Source:

http://preventdisease.com/news/11/091211_Pesticides-Directly-Correlated-With-Increased-ADHD-Cases-in-Children.shtml

 

4 Comments »

  • robert says:

    What I do not hear about very often are the excitotoxic versions of pesticides like termador and Termide. These chemicals block GABA receptors in the insect and hence, disrupt the rest (sleep) cycle of the the insect. Mostly they are used for termite and carpenter ant control and they work very well and that is why they are used. Termador (fipranil)is also used in flea collars for pets. All animals share a large number of neuro transmitters and receptors in there physiology. Endorphin receptors, for example, have been found intact in single celled creatures. GABA is another universal active pep-tide. One of the big issues with this group of GABA disrupers is their long potency life. Some have short active lives, yet persist for years in the photo breakdown (degradation) phase. These chemicals “off gas” or persist in dust for years. These chemicals are only tested on animals before they are released for sale. We human guinea pigs must wait decades. The excitotoxic effects work on human GABA receptors as they do insects. For us however, the symptoms are not immediate death, however, a slow brain death, Our symptoms are agitation, insomnia, aggression, confusion, hyperactivity, brain fog and antisocial behavior just to name a few. If they are taken off the market, their effects amble on for many years. The manufacturers could care less. Never use these products in your homes and eat organic.

  • Lois Rain says:

    WOW! Robert very interesting. ADHD folks often struggle with those symptoms AND they are often prescribed GABA!

  • Audrye says:

    Very interesting. I intend to mention this on MIRACLE MANIFESTING MONDAYS, my BlogTalkRadio show tonite, 8 pm EDT. http://www.BlogTalkRadio.com/GoddessHeartNetwork . Thank you for this info.

  • Orgreenx says:

    I am owner and founder of an organic lawn fertilization and indoor pest control company. A few of my clients as do I currently believe that It’s due to the high toxicity in all the chemically induced pesticides currently used in your lawns and inside your home. People need to be educated that Organics are the safer approach! OrgreenX currently uses these products for lawn fertilization: our fertilizing product provides the essential minerals and amino acids, our corn gluten provides a weed preventer, our pco provides insect control through cedar oil, and our hydrolyzed fish provided the protein the plants and roots need.

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