• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Health Videos

Leeches therapy industry booms

As leech therapy gains popularity, a laboratory near Moscow is boosting production of this increasingly valuable -- and slimy -- commodity.  Video 

Under the knife, without the knife

Autopsies have gone virtual thanks to Swiss forensic pathologists who are conducting about 100 ''virtopsies'' a year.  Video 

Plastics chemical harms brain function in monkeys

Fri Sep 5, 2008 4:20pm EDT
A boy carries used plastic bottles in a shop which will be sent to recycling plants in Dhaka in this January 29, 2007 file photo. REUTERS/Rafiqur Rahman

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Scientists reported this week new evidence that low doses of the chemical bisphenol A (BPA), widely used to make plastic food and drinking containers, can impair brain function in primates, extending the findings of previous research conducted in rats.

Health

Whether the amount of BPA that leaches out of containers into food and beverages represents an environmental risk is a subject of controversy.

"Our primate model indicates that BPA could negatively affect brain function in humans," study investigator Tibor Hajszan said in a press release from the Yale University School of Medicine in New Haven, Connecticut.

Hajszan and colleagues examined the influence of continuous exposure to BPA at a daily dose representing the US Environmental Protection Agency's current reference safe daily limit (50 micrograms per kilogram) in young adult African green monkeys.

According to a report in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences this week, BPA completely abolished the formation of some nerve connections in two key regions of the brain - the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex.

These findings have "profound implications," the investigators maintain, given the critical role of these nerve connections in cognition and mood.

"Based on these findings, we think the EPA may wish to consider lowering its 'safe daily limit' for human BPA consumption," Hajszan said.

SOURCE: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, September 2, 2008.



More from Reuters

A customer is served at a counter inside a foreign exchange store displaying a poster of various banknotes including the Chinese yuan or renminbi (RMB) in Hong Kong November 20, 2009. REUTERS/Bobby Yip
OUTLOOK 2010:

Be careful what you wish for

Pressure on China to loosen its grip on the yuan will continue but the U.S. should tread carefully. Here are five world market issues to watch.  Full Article 

Clients work out on machines at the Bally Total Fitness facility in Arvada, Colorado June 15, 2009.  REUTERS/Rick Wilking

Get real with resolutions

We make them and we break them: The secret to keeping them is to avoid the impossible dream.  Full Article