Science

42 "mystery chemicals" from unknown sources discovered in people

New research highlights the need for chemical manufacturers to be more transparent in reporting how and where chemical compounds are used
New research highlights the need for chemical manufacturers to be more transparent in reporting how and where chemical compounds are used

A study from scientists at UC San Francisco is demonstrating a new screening method developed to better identify human-made chemicals in people. The proof-of-concept research discovered more than 100 chemicals, including 55 that have never been reported found in humans before.

The research team set out to develop a screening workflow to detect chemical exposures in pregnant women. Matched maternal and umbilical cord blood samples were screened using a method called liquid chromatography–quadrupole time-of-flight tandem mass spectrometry.

Overall, the research homed in on 109 unique chemicals in the blood samples. Half of those chemicals detected have never previously been reported in human beings, and 42 were labeled "mystery chemicals" with unknown environmental sources.

“These chemicals have probably been in people for quite some time, but our technology is now helping us to identify more of them,” explains Tracey Woodruff, one of the authors on the new study. “It is alarming that we keep seeing certain chemicals travel from pregnant women to their children, which means these chemicals can be with us for generations.”

Many of the chemicals detected could be traced back to certain products such as cosmetics, pharmaceuticals, pesticides and flame retardants. However, a number of chemicals identified were relatively unknown, with no information as to what they are used for or how they could have contaminated a human body.

One chemical detected, for example, is known as LL-D-253alpha. The researchers say very little is known about this compound and there currently seems to be no known commercial uses for it.

“It’s very concerning that we are unable to identify the uses or sources of so many of these chemicals,” says Woodruff. “EPA must do a better job of requiring the chemical industry to standardize its reporting of chemical compounds and uses. And they need to use their authority to ensure that we have adequate information to evaluate potential health harms and remove chemicals from the market that pose a risk.”

Dimitri Panagopoulos Abrahamsson, co-lead author on the new study, says chemical manufacturers must be more transparent in providing access to chemical data known as analytical standards. These standards allow researchers to compare their findings to pure chemicals from manufacturers, but that information is not always easily accessible.

“These new technologies are promising in enabling us to identify more chemicals in people,” Dimitri notes, “but our study findings also make clear that chemical manufacturers need to provide analytical standards so that we can confirm the presence of chemicals and evaluate their toxicity.”

The study makes no claims as to potential harms from these chemical exposures. The key takeaway from the study, the researchers stress, is that it highlights a lack of strong regulatory protections and the need for manufacturers to issue analytical standards so chemicals in people and the environment can be swiftly traced back to their sources.

The new study was published in then journal Environmental Science and Technology.

Source: UC San Francisco

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6 comments
wolf0579
Did you know that there are hundreds of chemical compounds that the US FDA CANNOT TEST FOR SAFETY TO HUMANS?

The American Chemical Council has lobbied to prevent testing of several compounds used in artificial flavorings. They made it ILLEGAL FOR THE FDA TO TEST THESE COMPOUNDS.

One wonders what the "American" Chemical Council knows, but doesn't want to FDA to know.
aksdad
When instruments can measure with ever-greater precision, you find out all kinds of things you never knew before. Alarmists think the discoveries are, well, alarming and must be regulated despite zero evidence of any harm. Normal people think it's just interesting. I'm normal.
ChairmanLMAO
It's interesting to note endogenous chemicals like morphine and di-methyltriptamine are produced within the human body. Makes one wonder what kind of alchemy really goes on inside on any given Monday?
Bruce Warren
Why is it assumed that these mystery chemicals are nasty things that came from the environment and were absorbed by the person? Maybe certains compounds get created when mixes of 'normal' chemicals are created in the gut? And maybe some of these new chemicals are actually preventing some bad disease in the person.
Signguy
Test some people who are dedicated to clean eating and organics their lifetime and compare them to those who call themselves "normal".
Max Machination
The sperm count in humans has dropped by 60% since 1972 due to chemical pollution. At this rate it'll be 0 by 2045. We're literally polluting ourselves to extinction.