Study links C8, high cholesterol levels
By BRETT DUNLAP, bdunlap@newsandsentinel.comPARKERSBURG - A study in the C8 health project found children with higher levels of C8 in their blood tend to also have higher cholesterol, but the data doesn't prove whether C8 caused it, the report said.
The study, filed Friday in Wood County Circuit Court by the C8 Science Panel, says researchers found higher levels of C8 are significantly associated with high levels of cholesterol. Earlier research tied C8 exposure to high cholesterol levels in adults.
This study was led by collaborators to the Science Panel, including West Virginia University, Stephanie Frisbee, Anoop Shankar, Sarah Knox and Alan Ducatman.
''These investigators have access to the same de-identified data set originating from the C8 Health Project as we do,'' the Science Panel said in the report. ''All three Science Panel members are co-authors on the report being submitted to the journal and concur with its findings.''
Those conducting the study found serum perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA or C8) has been associated with total cholesterol and other lipids in some studies of exposed workers.
The study population consisted of 12,476 residents under age 18 living at some point in six water districts contaminated by C8 who participated in the large health survey in 2005-2006. The average level of PFOA in the serum was 69 ng/ml while the average level of PFOS, a related chemical, was 23 ng/ml.
''The PFOA levels were much higher than the U.S. population average level of about 5 ng/ml, while the PFOS levels were similar to the average level for the U.S. population,'' the report said. ''In multivariate models adjusting for other factors (age, body mass index, sex, fasting status prior to blood collection), higher PFOA and PFOS were each significantly associated with higher total cholesterol and LDL cholesterol. There were no consistent trends between PFOA and either HDL or triglycerides. Higher PFOS was associated with higher HDL, but showed no trend with triglycerides.''
Only modest associations between PFOA and PFOS and some lipids in children have been seen, the study said.
''Interpretation of these results is made difficult by the cross-sectional design of our study, which prohibits knowing whether an increase in cholesterol (or LDL cholesterol) may have followed or preceded an increase in PFOA or PFOS,'' the report said. ''The mechanism by which these chemicals might be related to cholesterol in humans is not known. These data alone cannot prove whether the PFOA and PFOS differences in these children caused the observed shift in cholesterol, or whether there is another explanation.''
Another explanation could be that there is an unknown exposure or another substance in the blood that correlates both with increased lipids and with increased retention of C8 and PFOS in the blood, according to the report.
The Science Panel is conducting more definitive studies to try to determine which of these possibilities is more likely.
''The fact that both PFOA and PFOS were associated with increases in cholesterol may indicate an association with this chemical class (perfluorinated compounds) in general, rather than specifically either PFOA or PFOS,'' the report said. ''These findings for total cholesterol and LDL cholesterol in children are similar to a previous finding in adults in this same population.''
The research was conducted as part of a settlement of a class-action lawsuit brought by Ohio and West Virginia residents against DuPont Co. The residents allege exposure to ammonium perfluorooctanoate from DuPont's Washington Works plant. Also known as PFOA or C8, the chemical is used to make Teflon.
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11-10-09 7:39 AM
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DuPont's slippery executives are trying to gut, not reform regulation of toxins! Ken Ward, Jr, an investigative journalist for the CHARLESTON GAZETTE is reporting ("DuPont Pushing for Weaker Limits on PFOA," Nov. 9, 2009) that DuPont Management "is leading a push by industry" to weaken water pollution limit on the vilely toxic, likely cancer-causing Teflon chemical PFOA and other perfluorinated chemicals. In a closed-door meeting, Oct. 15-16, 2009, "industry scientists" met with U. S. EPA officials to demand and argue their case for weakening the EPA standard of 0.4 ppb to 1.3 ppb. They even want to do away with the customary "external dose animal testing" for setting limits. This can't possibly be favourable news for a multitude of people drinking C8-contaminated water from their home taps at various sites of pollution around the United States, can it? ...funfun..
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AaronL
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11-04-09 3:05 PM
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Quite a few great points are made here, but let's also have a study of the age old chemicals leaching into the water from the old FMC plant that made rayon in the 50's 60's and 70's. There is still horrible stuff coming from there as well as from Ames now defunct shovel plant. Added all togather, this can't be good.
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funfun
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11-04-09 6:30 AM
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This "significant" linkage of higher PFOA or C8 exposure with higher levels of cholesterol in children shouts loudly this vilely toxic industrial Teflon chemical is not the innocent-as-Snow White agent for making Teflon DuPont's secretive and evasive Management has for years been insisting it is. "No risk" to the public, they claim disingenuously, "no human health effects", perfectly SAFE! In the meantime, sip by sip, tiny amounts at a time, the little kids in the City of Parkersburg accumulate PFOA in their growing bodies every time they drink from their home faucets or swallow from a hose on a hot day. The massive toxic Teflon chemical scandal of the disreputable DuPont continues to grow! ...funfun..
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