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Pesticides endocrine effects

Section 408(f)(1)(B) of the FFDCA specifically contemplates use of TSCA 4 test rules to gather data on endocrine effects of pesticide residue chemicals. However, this portion of the FFDCA is not an independent grant of authority to use TSCA to gather information on a pesticide that is excluded from TSCA s scope. [Pg.52]

Endocrine effects caused by a pesticide are also to be addressed under FQPA. The main hormonal systems under consideration are male and female... [Pg.156]

L-Tyrosine metabohsm and catecholamine biosynthesis occur largely in the brain, central nervous tissue, and endocrine system, which have large pools of L-ascorbic acid (128). Catecholamine, a neurotransmitter, is the precursor in the formation of dopamine, which is converted to noradrenaline and adrenaline. The precise role of ascorbic acid has not been completely understood. Ascorbic acid has important biochemical functions with various hydroxylase enzymes in steroid, dmg, andhpid metabohsm. The cytochrome P-450 oxidase catalyzes the conversion of cholesterol to bUe acids and the detoxification process of aromatic dmgs and other xenobiotics, eg, carcinogens, poUutants, and pesticides, in the body (129). The effects of L-ascorbic acid on histamine metabohsm related to scurvy and anaphylactic shock have been investigated (130). Another ceUular reaction involving ascorbic acid is the conversion of folate to tetrahydrofolate. Ascorbic acid has many biochemical functions which affect the immune system of the body (131). [Pg.21]

Another section of the EPA, the Office of Prevention, Pesticides, and Toxic Substances (OPPT), has recently updated and harmonized its testing guidelines for evaluating the developmental and reproductive effects of pesticides and industrial chemicals to include an assessment of endocrine disrupting properties. These guidelines will be used in future testing of pesticides under both the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) and the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA). [Pg.24]

Compounds Affecting Rq>roduction Compounds that can affect reproductive function include several drugs and occupationally important chemicals such as solvents and pesticides as well as a number of environmentally relevant com-fxrunds. A group of chemical compounds that has received much attention recently is endocrine disrupters, many of which are halogenated hydrocarbons, e.g., PCBs. These are known to induce feminization in fish and other animal species.1.5/ There is intense debate about the significance of these compounds to human health. Tobacco smoke and ethyl alcohol also have major effects on human reproduction, the effects of alcohol being especially important. Table 5.17 lists compounds that may disturb the functions of female and male reproductive functions. [Pg.304]

For methyl parathion, most of the information on health effects in humans is derived from cases of acute exposure to relatively high concentrations of the pesticide. Such reports have not addressed the issue of the potential endocrine-disrupting capacity of methyl parathion in humans. An added complication in determining whether methyl parathion has endocrine-disrupting capabilities in humans is the fact that humans are seldom exposed to a single pesticide. [Pg.104]

Jaensson, A., Scott, A.P., and Moore, A. et al. (2007). Effects of a pyrethroid pesticide on endocrine responses to female odours and reproductive behaviour in male parr of brown trout (Salmo trutta L.). Aquatic Toxicology 81, 1-9. [Pg.353]

Pesticides have a statistically reliable effect on children in zones where OCPs are intensively used (in the Salyansk region of Azerbaijan, the amount of OCPs introduced into humans exceeded public health standards by up to 7.7 times). Primary illness of the endocrine system increased 3.1 times in children up to age 15 (over a five year observation period) in disruptions in diet and metabolism, the nervous system, and the sensory and respiratory organs in increased frequency of illness (over five years) in children up to age 15 (an overall increase by 3.6 times, and by class of illness, from 2.2-7.6 times) in the prevalence of pathological disruptions according to data from medical examinations of children from 8-14 years (an overall increase by 2.3 times, and by class of illness by 2.0-8.4 times) in... [Pg.72]

Rawlings, N.C., S.J. Cook, and D. Waldbillig. 1998. Effects of the pesticides carbofuran, chlorpyrifos, dimethoate, lindane, triallate, trifluralin, 2,4-D, and pentachlorophenol on the metabolic endocrine and reproductive endocrine system in ewes. Jour. Toxicol. Environ. Health 54A 21-36. [Pg.826]

Episodic pollution events can adequately be addressed by acute toxicity bioassays, however these are not sufficient to investigate the water quality for delayed toxicity effects of chemicals present. Chronic effects of pesticides can include carcinogenicity, teratogenicity, mutagenicity, neurotoxicity, and reproductive effects (endocrine disruption). [Pg.68]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.80 ]




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