EMORY Health Sciences News
Robert W. Woodruff Health Sciences Center
Health Science Communications
September 23, 2005
Organic Diets Lower Children's Dietary Exposure to Common Agriculture Pesticides
Media Contacts:
Tia McCollors, 404-727-5692, Tia.McCollors@emory.edu
Janet Christenbury, 404-727-8599, jmchris@emory.edu
Kathi O. Baker, 404-727-9371, kobaker@emory.edu
ATLANTA - A study led by an
Emory University researcher concludes that an organic diet given to children
provides
a "dramatic and immediate protective effect" against exposures to
two pesticides that are commonly used in U.S. agricultural production. The
results
were published on a recent online version of the scientific journal Environmental
Health Perspectives (EHP).
Over a fifteen-day period, Dr. Chensheng "Alex" Lu and his colleagues
from Emory University, the University of Washington, and the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention specifically measured the exposure of two organophosphorus
pesticides (OP) - malathion and chlorpyrifos - in 23 elementary students in
the Seattle area by testing their urine.
The participants, ages 3-11-years-old, were first monitored for three days
on their conventional diets before the researchers substituted most of the
children's
conventional diets with organic food items for five consecutive days. The children
were then re-introduced to their normal foods and monitored for an additional
seven days.
"
Immediately after substituting organic food items for the children's normal diets,
the concentration of the organophosphorus pesticides found in their bodies decreased
substantially to non-detectable levels until the conventional diets were re-introduced," says
Dr. Lu, an assistant professor in the department of environmental and occupational
health, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University.
During the days when children consumed organic diets, most of their urine
samples contained zero concentration for the malathion metabolite. However,
once the
children returned to their conventional diets, the average malathion metabolite
concentration increased to 1.6 parts per billion with a concentration range
from 5 to 263 parts per billion, Dr. Lu explains.
A similar trend was observed for chlorpyrifos. As the average chlorpyrifos
metabolite concentration increased from one part per billion during the organic
diet days
to six parts per billion when children consumed conventional food.
The researchers note that to ensure that any detectable change in dietary
pesticide exposure would be attributable to the organic food rather than
the change in
diet, the substituted organic foods were items the children would have normally
eaten as part of their conventional diet.Organic food items were substituted
for the conventional diet of fresh fruits and vegetables, juices, processed
fruits or vegetables (e.g. salsa), and
wheat-based or corn-based products (i.e. pasta, cereal, popcorn, or chips).
Former research has linked organophosphorus pesticides to causes of neurological
effects in animals and humans.
"
Recent regulatory changes aiming to minimize children's exposures to pesticides
have either banned or restricted the use of many organophosphorus pesticides
in the residential environment. However, fewer restrictions have been imposed
in agriculture," Dr. Lu says.
According to the annual survey by U.S. Department of Agriculture Pesticide
Data Program,
organophosphorus pesticide residues are still routinely detected in food
items that are commonly consumed by young children.
The study was funded by the United States Environmental Protection Agency.
The Environmental Health Perspectives (EHP) is an open access journal published
by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences. The full article
is available at http://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/docs/2005/8418/abstract.html.
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