© Charles
Platiau / Reuters
|
The risk of developing
blood cancers such as leukemia and lymphoma increases significantly in children
exposed to pesticides indoors, a recent meta-analysis has shown. A correlation between
pesticide exposure and childhood brain tumors has also been observed.
Children
who are exposed to indoor insecticides – by either breathing in or eating them
– are more likely to be diagnosed with the two types of blood cancer, which are
among the most common childhood cancers. Such exposure is associated with a 47
percent higher risk of childhood leukaemia, while the risk of lymphoma grows by
43 percent.
A
significant increase in risk of leukemia – by 26 percent – was also associated
with herbicide exposure, the study published
in the Pediatrics journal, showed.
RT America report continues:
“Also observed was a positive but not statistically significant association between childhood home pesticide or herbicide exposure and childhood brain tumors,” the researchers said.
“Also observed was a positive but not statistically significant association between childhood home pesticide or herbicide exposure and childhood brain tumors,” the researchers said.
However,
according to the analysis, no association between the use of outdoor
insecticides and childhood cancers has been found.
The
research looked at children's exposure to three types of pesticides – indoor
insecticides, outdoor insecticides and herbicides, determined through parent
interviews. It examined the results from 16 previous international studies that
have compared healthy children and young cancer patients. The largest of those
studies included nearly 1,200 children with cancer, Live Science reported.
“Remember that pesticides
are designed and manufactured to kill organisms,” the author of the study,
Chensheng Lu, told Live Science. Ingredients that kill insects could also be
causing genetic mutations in human cells, the researcher said.
To confirm the findings, additional research is needed, the latest analysis
concluded, adding that "meanwhile preventive measures should be considered
to reduce children’s exposure to pesticides at home."
No comments:
Post a Comment