Cats as Sentinel Species
Pet cats may be like canaries in coal mines when it comes to
evaluating the health impacts of polybrominated diphenyl ethers
(PBDEs), persistent chemicals used in carpet pads, furniture, and
electronics. Chronic PBDE exposure may partly explain an epidemic of
hyperthyroid disease in older cats, says Janice Dye, a U.S. EPA
research biologist. In turn, studying the effects of chronic PBDE
exposure in cats could offer clues as to the effects in their human
counterparts.
Veterinarians first noticed a dramatic surge in
feline hyperthyroidism (FH) in the 1980s, coinciding with the use of
PBDEs as flame retardants in consumer products. FH, the most common
endocrine disorder in cats, causes rapid weight loss due to increased
concentrations of thyroxine. Histologic changes in FH mirror those seen
in older humans experiencing toxic nodular goiter (TNG), in which an
enlarged thyroid gland overproduces thyroxine. The causes of FH and TNG
remain unknown.
Dye looked at whether hyperthyroidal cats had greater body burdens
of PBDEs. She and her colleagues measured numerous PBDE congeners in
serum samples collected from 23 cats, 11 of which were positive for FH.
They report in the 15 September 2007
Environmental Science & Technology
that total average PBDE levels were three times higher in older cats
with FH than in younger cats without FH, but the difference was not
statistically significant because of high within-group variability.
"All cats are high [compared with humans], and some cats are incredibly
high," Dye notes. She also found that cat food, particularly canned
fish-flavored brands, contains high levels of PBDEs. Cats swallow PBDEs
in food and by licking PBDE-laden house dust from their fur.
PBDE congeners contain bromine atoms that mimic
the iodine in thyroxine. PBDEs may interact with thyroid-binding
proteins to displace thyroxine, and chronic exposure may lead to
sustained increases in secretion of thyroid-stimulating hormone and
thyroid hyperplasia. "When that happens," says Dye, "it's pedal to the
metal, and the cat's thyroid makes too much thyroxine."
The potential link between FH and PBDEs suggests
that house cats may be sentinels for chronic indoor PBDE exposure in
people. By understanding more completely how PBDEs alter thyroid
hormone levels in cat sentinels, "we can assess whether comparable risk
exists for exposed people, especially children," Dye says. Like cats,
toddlers may be inordinately exposed to PBDEs in dust by crawling on
floors and placing objects in their mouths. A case study of one family,
described in the October 2006
EHP,
found that a toddler had PBDE levels up to 10 times higher than those
of his parents. "We don't know what PBDEs do to children during
critical stages of development," says Dye, but cats offer hints about
"where chronic exposure may lead." People in the United States have the
highest PBDE levels reported worldwide, according to a meta-analysis
published in the 15 February 2004
Environmental Science & Technology.
Heather Stapleton, an environmental chemist at Duke University, points
out that the link between PBDEs and health problems in cats is
reminiscent of the revelation 25 years ago that children ingesting lead
in household dust experienced learning problems. Says Stapleton, "It's
important to understand the effects of exposure to these brominated
flame retardants in humans."
Carol Potera
http://www.ehponline.org/docs/2007/115-12/forum.html#cats