Printer Friendly
The Free Library
5,674,088 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Farming infertility: country living may be hazardous to your potency.


When epidemiologist Shanna Swan began comparing fertility in urban versus rural men, she thought she knew what she would find. Just as corn, sorghum sorghum, tall, coarse annual (Sorghum vulgare) of the family Gramineae (grass family), somewhat similar in appearance to corn (but having the grain in a panicle rather than an ear) and used for much the same purposes.  and soybeans grow better in central Missouri's hills and hollers than in a polluted parking lot in urban New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
, Los Angeles or Minneapolis, so too would fertility be higher among men living in the clean, bucolic countryside.

She turned out to be completely wrong. In 2002, when the study appeared in the peer-reviewed journal peer-reviewed journal Refereed journal Academia A professional journal that only publishes articles subjected to a rigorous peer validity review process. Cf Throwaway journal.  Environmental Health Perspectives, Swan reported that men in rural Boone County, Missouri Boone County is a county located at the geographical center of the U.S. state of Missouri. As of 2006, the population was 146,048. Its county seat, Columbia, is the fourth largest city in Missouri and the anchor city of the Columbia, Missouri Metropolitan Area.  had a 42 percent lower sperm count sperm count Urology A measure of the concentration of sperm in semen Normal ±100 million/mL. See Post-vasectomy sperm count, Semen analysis.  than their counterparts in urban Minneapolis. The rural men also had lower quality sperm as measured by movement, shape and other factors.

Swan didn't look for infertility, and men were chosen from among those who came into participating centers with their pregnant partners. A man is considered effectively infertile in·fer·tile
adj.
Not capable of initiating, sustaining, or supporting reproduction.


infertile,
adj unable to produce offspring.
 if his sperm counts fall below 20 million per milliliter milliliter /mil·li·li·ter/ (mL) (-le?ter) one thousandth (10-3) of a liter.

mil·li·li·ter
n. Abbr.
, and his fertility is considered impaired below 40 million per milliliter. The Missouri men had a mean of 59 million per milliliter, compared with 99 million and 103 million in Minneapolis and New York, respectively.

Swan says some of the Missouri men had counts well below 40 million or even 20 million and still reproduced. It only takes one sperm and one egg to make a baby, but with fewer sperm to start with the couple may have to work harder to conceive. (Home tests check samples relative to the 20 million/milliliter measure only.

Faulting Farms

Swan, who is a professor of family and community medicine at the University of Missouri in Columbia, and her colleagues reviewed their data to figure out what might account for the difference. The first obvious candidate was farming--and the associated pesticides--since 57 percent of Boone County land is devoted to agriculture while 19 percent or less is farmed in the other areas studied.

To test that hypothesis, the researchers looked at urine collected from the men in the first study, and checked for the breakdown products of 15 different common farm chemicals. Those results, published last July in Environmental Health Perspectives, found that men with high levels of the herbicide alachlor were 30 times more likely to have diminished sperm quality. Men with high levels of the insecticide diazanon or the herbicide atrazine atrazine

a triazine herbicide; it is not poisonous at levels of intake likely to be encountered in agriculture.

atrazine Toxicology A nonphytoestrogenic herbicide. See Phytoestrogen.
 were 16.7 or 11.3 times more likely to have poor sperm quality, respectively.

The insecticide diazanon was once commonly used in urban areas but soon won't be allowed for such uses because of its toxicity to children, explains Pollyanna Lind of the Northwest Coalition for Alternatives to Pesticides. Now it's used only in agriculture, primarily for fruit and nut Fruit and Nut some times known as Cadbury Fruit And Nut Bars are bars of milk chocolate with raisins and almonds which are made by Cadbury and based on their solid Dairy Milk bar, but containing nuts and raisins.  crops. Alachlor is used only in agriculture, primarily on corn, peanuts, beans, sorghum and soybeans. Atrazine is used broadly and widely.

Scientists for decades have been tantalized with discrepancies in sperm quality in different locations, findings that hinted at an environmental connection. Studies in Denmark, Scotland and the United States have found declining sperm counts over time.

And there are well-documented links between some chemicals that have since been banned and the complete loss of sperm in workers exposed to them, such as dibromochloropropane (DBCP DBCP Dibromochloropropane
DBCP Database Connection Pooling
DBCP Data Buoy Cooperation Panel (IOC, WMO)
DBCP Digital Broadcast Content Provision (FCC)
DBCP Data Base Connection Pools
), a pesticide historically used on pineapples. Persistent organic pollutants such as phthalates Phthalates, or phthalate esters, are a group of chemical compounds that are mainly used as plasticizers (substances added to plastics to increase their flexibility). They are chiefly used to turn polyvinyl chloride from a hard plastic into a flexible plastic. , found in plastics, and polychlorinated biphenyls polychlorinated biphenyls, (pol´ēklôr´nā´tid bīfē´n  (PCBs) as well as other chemicals that disrupt hormonal processes also have been linked to lowered male fertility. But despite their reputations, tight jeans, tobacco and alcohol have little effect on sperm counts, Swan says.

Both of Swan's studies, which were funded by the National Institutes of Health, were groundbreaking, the first to link lowered sperm quality with rural life and the first to look at the reproductive effects of pesticides as they actually occur in the environment.

Critics charge that the studies weren't done properly. Angelina Duggan of CropLife America--which represents agricultural-chemical companies--says Swan's sample was too small, should have considered infertile men, took samples in the heat of summer when sperm counts typically drop, and considered too small a window in the man's life instead of an overall history.

"We're interested in ... any of her findings, and we don't make light of them," says Duggan. "But we consider the study preliminary and flawed."

But if the findings are replicated and confirmed, Swan says the news would be "enormously significant be cause the pesticides we've linked to poor semen quality semen quality Urology The measurable parameters of semen–eg, sperm concentration, total sperm count per ejaculate, % of motile sperm, number of abnormal and immature sperm  are among the most commonly used." Further, recent reports by the U.S. Geological Survey found high levels of atrazine and alachlor in the nation's surface waters.

Practicing Precaution

So what should a person do if they're looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 clean living? Some ideas that may help:

* Know what's in your drinking water. Local utilities must issue annual reports about contaminant contaminant /con·tam·i·nant/ (kon-tam´in-int) something that causes contamination.

contaminant

something that causes contamination.
 levels. Wells can be tested by a certified lab.

* If you have concerns, consider water filters. NSF International tests filters for their ability to remove alachlor and atrazine, but not diazanon. Results are posted on its website.

* The most versatile filters sit on or under the sink. Multipure ($200 and up) makes some of the most famous, but Culligan, Everpure and Sears make certified models. Pur offers the only pour-through pitchers that remove atrazine, but they don't touch alachlor ($17 to $30). Brita faucet-mount models remove both ($35).

* Support alternatives to pesticides, including organic agriculture. Filters are a Band-Aid, says NCAP's Lind. To address the larger problem, vote with your grocery dollars to influence how crops are grown.

Swan's study should he a wakeup call, because, for once, it's not hyperbole to say that the future of humankind is at stake. CONTACT: NSF International, (877)8-NSF-HELR www.nsfconsumer.org/water/dw_treatment.asp; Study for Future Families, www.missouri.edu/~sff. Home semen test: www.testsymptomsathome.com.
COPYRIGHT 2004 Earth Action Network, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:Your Health
Author:Izakson, Orna
Publication:E
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jan 1, 2004
Words:959
Previous Article:Oh, Canada! Does the great white north deserve its green reputation?
Next Article:Just juice: all-natural choices avoid synthetic additives and refined sugar.(Eating Right)
Topics:



Related Articles
Where you live: Can be hazardous to your health. (On First Reading).(Brief Article)
Lead-free but not problem-free: human health risks from gasolines. (Science Selections).
Childhood leukemia: bad air linked to increased risk. (Science Selections).
Gender, masculinity, and reproduction: anthropological perspectives.
Defining infertility: what infertility means for clinicians and clients.
Men contribute to and suffer from infertility.
WAGING CHEMICAL WARFARE LAWSUIT FILED AGAINST EPA OVER PESTICIDES' HARM TO CHILDREN.(News)
Shea O. Rutstein and Iqbal H. Shah: Infecundity, Infertility and Childlessness in Developing Countries.(Brief Article)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles