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• How Tiny Amounts Of Drugs In Tap Water May Impact Human Cells |

Ingesting tiny scant amounts of drugs could have powerful effect, experiment
shows
Troubled by drugs discovered in European waters, poisons
expert and biologist Francesco Pomati set up an experiment: He exposed
developing human kidney cells to a mixture of 13 drugs at levels mimicking those
found in Italian rivers.
There were drugs to fight high cholesterol and blood
pressure, seizures and depression, pain and infection, and cancer, all in tiny
amounts.
The result: The pharmaceutical
blend slowed cell growth by up to a third — suggesting that scant amounts may
exert powerful effects, said Pomati, who works at the University of New South
Wales in Sydney, Australia.
Taken alone, this was a modest study. But in fact
Pomati’s work is part of a body of emerging scientific studies that indicate
that over time, humans could be harmed by ingesting drinking water contaminated
with tiny amounts of pharmaceuticals.
In another recently published
study, Pomati discovered that some of those pharmaceuticals could amplify — or
reverse — the effects of some others.
For example, the cholesterol drug
bezafibrate and asthma drug salbutamol each seem to stimulate cell growth.
Combined in the laboratory, they slowed it way down. The same cholesterol drug
appeared to make cells more sensitive to harm from the antibiotic
fluoroquinolone.
And Pomati’s work indicates some
drugs cause cellular effects at scant concentrations that — strangely — cannot
be seen at higher levels.
Such findings are preliminary;
they alone cannot demonstrate the same effects within the human body. But they
provide scientific hints, just like cellular experiments that routinely guide
discovery of new drugs.
Estrogen
risks
They also heighten worry about the
possible effects on especially vulnerable groups, like the very young, old or
sick. “My wife is pregnant, and I don’t let my wife drink the water ... where I
know that there are pollutants like pharmaceuticals in concentrations that are
detectable and in mixtures that are complex,” said Pomati.
Elsewhere in the world, other
researchers are finding results similar to Pomati’s.
In research awaiting publication,
human breast cancer cells grew twice as fast when exposed to estrogens taken
from catfish caught near untreated sewage overflows in Pennsylvania, compared
with other fish.
The University of Pittsburgh
researchers didn’t calculate how much effect came from pharmaceuticals instead
of natural hormones, but their earlier work points to birth-control pills and
hormone treatments as important contributors, said lead researcher Conrad
Volz.
“There is the potential for an
increased risk for those people who are prone to estrogenic cancer,” said Volz,
who studies environmental hazards at the university’s Cancer Institute.
He said people who regularly drink
water containing low levels of hormones may be at higher risk, since they would
presumably consume more of these drugs than those who only occasionally eat such
fish.
'Kaleidoscope of
chemicals'
Scientists at the Helmholtz research
center in Leipzig, Germany, linked low levels of the pain reliever diclofenac to
an inflammatory-like response in human blood cells, according to biologist
Kristin Schirmer. Inflammation at the wrong time and place plays a role in
conditions ranging from infections and arthritis to heart disease.
Sandra Steingraber, a biologist at
New York’s Ithaca College, adds that many efforts to determine how trace drugs
affect humans don’t fully consider the whole range of pharmaceuticals in the
environment and whether someone has been exposed at more susceptible times, like
during childhood or old age.
“The timing makes the poison as
much as the dose,” she said. “And the dose itself is not the dose from just any
one thing — it’s from this whole kaleidoscope of chemicals.”
Taking notice of accumulating
evidence, the drug industry has backed studies of its own in recent years that
have found very slight, if any, risk to humans.
“They miss some of the big issues.
Our research shows mixtures are so prevalent,” said Dana Kolpin, a U.S.
Geological Survey water expert who launched a plethora of research in 2002 after
finding pharmaceuticals in most samples taken from 139 streams in 30 states. “If
there are any cumulative or additive issues, you can’t just dismiss things so
quickly.”
Also, the studies usually ignore what might happen to
people exposed to the complex combinations of medicines that are often found in
drinking water.
Then, there are the byproducts of
the drugs. When medications are digested and processed through water treatment
plants, they may take a new metabolic form.
Even if Kolpin is right, the
industry may be focusing on the wrong pharmaceuticals, said chemist James Shine
at the Harvard School of Public Health, who oversaw what’s probably the broadest
risk review yet, a yet-to-be-published study covering scores of the most common
drugs sold in the United States.
As suspected, some chemotherapy
drugs turn up high on that list. But blood-pressure diuretics, though rarely
considered, appear to pose more risk than many drugs more often evaluated.
Even when researchers downplay
risk, that may not be the final word.
People “are going to be concerned
about being medicated by mandate when you turn on the tap,” said Dr. Stevan
Gressitt, a psychiatrist who’s led a push for a program in Maine that allows
consumers to turn in unused pharmaceuticals for secure disposal or destruction.
“And that’s going to be seen if the level is (only) one molecule in 100
taps.”
Source:http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23558785/
Where to find clean
drinking water you can trust: In California visit: www.TapWaterTruth.com Outside California visit: www.FineWaterImports.com
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