WEDNESDAY Aug 30, 2008 (foodconsumer.org) -- A federal
health official said yesterday June 10 that plastic baby bottles and water
bottles are safe to use and would not cause any harm to infants and young
children.
Bay bottles and water bottles commonly contain a toxic
chemical called bisphenol A, which make the plastic material solid and
unbreakable.
A tiny amount of the
chemical can be released from polycarbonate plastic over the time, particularly
under certain conditions such as high temperature.
The National Toxicology Program, an agency under the
Department of Health and Human Services, said early in a draft report that
there is some concern that bisphenol A may alter behavior and the brain and it
may also reduce survival and birth weight in fetuses in animal studies, Reuters
reported.
Dr. Norris Alderson, the Food and Drug Administration's
associate commissioner for science yesterday told the House Subcommittee on
Commerce, Trade and Consumer Protection Committee on Energy and Commerce that
the level is not high enough to cause injury.
He said some studies reported higher releases than estimated
by the agency, but in many cases the releases were measured under unrealistic
conditions.
"A large body of available evidence indicates that
currently-marketed food contact materials containing BPA are safe, and that
exposure to BPA from food contact materials, including exposures for infants
and children, are below the levels that may cause health effects," Dr.
Alderson said.
In addition to baby bottles and water bottles, bisphenol-A
-laced polycarbonate plastic, which looks nice and transparent and almost
shatter-proof, is also used in sports equipment, medical devices, CDs and
household electrics, and epoxy resins as coatings on the inside of almost all
food and beverage cans, according to wikipedia.
Studies have found that bisphenol A, an endocrine disruptor,
may pose a significant effect in fetuses even at a very lower dose. Reuters
cited Dr. Ted Schettler, director of the Science and Environmental Health
Network as telling lawmakers that animal studies showed prenatal exposure to
low-level bisphenol A can change development of the prostate gland and breast,
resulting in a high risk of cancer in late life.
One study published in Biol. Reprod. 72 (6): 1344-51 showed
that exposure to 0.025 µg of bisphenol A per kilogram of body weight per day
could permanently change genital tract.
Phthalates, another class of plastic chemicals, which unlike
bisphenol A are used to make vinyl plastic soft and flexible, also cause safety
concerns. Phthalates-based material is used commonly in medical devices such as
IV tubes, cars and toys.
Phthalates are also widely used in cosmetics, fragrances,
antifoaming and suspension agents, skin emollients, and plasticizers in nail
products, Alderson acknowledged in his testimony.
Dr. Alderson told lawmakers that the FDA continue keeping an
eye on the concerns for both bisphenol A and phthalates because any conclusion
could never be final.
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