Warning: Teflon Can Cause
Birth Defects & Infertility
PFOA, a chemical found in products ranging from clothes to
stain repellents to food packaging and cosmetics, and a component
of Teflon production, poses developmental and reproductive
risks to humans, according to a risk assessment form the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
Current PFOA exposures in children may be well above safe
levels, and some children have high enough blood levels of
PFOA to cause serious toxicity in laboratory studies.
The EPA reviewed PFOA after ³unexpected toxicological
and bioaccumulation discoveries² in the entire class
of perfluorinated chemicals, particularly PFOS (perfluorooctane
sulfonates), the active ingredient in Scotchgard, which was
removed from the market by the EPA in 2000.
PFOS has similar chemical properties to PFOA. Neither product
breaks down in the environment and both cause various cancers
and adverse effects.
In animal studies PFOA has been associated with:
* ³Significant increases in treatment related deaths²
in rat offspring at doses that did not affect the mothers
* Serious changes in the weight of various organs, including
the brain, prostate, liver, thymus, and kidneys
* The deaths of a significant number of rat pups of mothers
that had been exposed to PFOA
* Damage to the pituitary at all doses in female rat offspring
(The pituitary secretes hormones that regulate growth, reproduction,
and many metabolic processes. Change in pituitary size is
associated with toxicity)
Other unrelated studies have also found evidence of birth
defects in babies from PFOA-exposed workers. In 1981, two
out of seven women who worked at a DuPont Teflon plant gave
birth to babies with birth defects. DuPont then moved 50 women
workers at the plant to reduce their exposure to PFOA.
Additionally, PFOA has been associated with tumors in at
least four different organs in animal tests, and has been
associated with increases in prostate cancer in PFOA plant
workers.
The potentially harmful effects of PFOA are heightened because
exposure is so widespread. Some 90 percent of the U.S. population
has PFOA in their blood, some at levels as high as those found
in PFOA factory workers.
According to the EPA, it is not known how humans are generally
exposed to the substance. However, it has been suggested that
PFOA¹s longevity could be a contributing factor.
Unlike PCBs and DDT, PFOA does not break down in the environment,
so it is infinitely persistent. Additionally, other classes
of chemicals break down into PFOA, which means that even if
PFOA were banned, levels of the substance in the environment
could still increase due to the other chemicals.
In short, all of the PFOA generated by industries will remain
in the environment indefinitely.
Although PFOA and related chemicals have been widely used
in consumer products for 50 years, risks posed by such chemicals
have only recently been exposed. Industry is not required
to conduct safety tests on chemicals like PFOA in order to
sell or use them. Due to this lack of regulatory authority,
the EPA¹s influence over chemical manufacturers is largely
limited to requests for data once contamination creates a
problem.