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Chapel Hill bisphenol A expert panel consensus statement: Integration of mechanisms, effects in animals and potential to impact human health at current levels of exposure

Authors :
R. Thomas Zoeller
Susan Jobling
Patricia A. Hunt
John G. Vandenbergh
Debby Walser-Kuntz
D. Andrew Crain
Russ Hauser
Cheryl S. Watson
Scott M. Belcher
Laura N. Vandenberg
Gerald A. LeBlanc
Karen E. Knudsen
Beverly S. Rubin
Catherine A. Richter
Benson T. Akingbemi
Gail S. Prins
Marcus Eriksen
Frederick S. vom Saal
Carlos Sonnenschein
Francesca Farabollini
Nicolás Olea
Retha R. Newbold
Angel Nadal
Michele Marcus
Jun Kanno
Taisen Iguchi
John A. McLachlan
Ruth A. Keri
Louis J. Guillette
Ana M. Soto
Jerrold J. Heindel
Yelena B. Wetherill
John Peterson Myers
Linda S. Birnbaum
Wade V. Welshons
Hans Laufer
Shuk-Mei Ho
Chris E. Talsness
Source :
Digibug. Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad de Granada, instname
Publication Year :
2007
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2007.

Abstract

This document is a summary statement of the outcome from the meeting: “Bisphenol A: An Examination of the Relevance of Ecological, In vitro and Laboratory Animal Studies for Assessing Risks to Human Health” sponsored by both the NIEHS and NIDCR at NIH/DHHS, as well as the US-EPA and Commonweal on the estrogenic environmental chemical bisphenol A (BPA, 2,2-bis(4-hydroxyphenyl)propane; CAS# 80-05-7). The meeting was held in Chapel Hill, NC, 28–30 November 2006 due to concerns about the potential for a relationship between BPA and negative trends in human health that have occurred in recent decades. Examples include increases in abnormal penile/urethra development in males, early sexual maturation in females, an increase in neurobehavioral problems such as attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and autism, an increase in childhood and adult obesity and type 2 diabetes, a regional decrease in sperm count, and an increase in hormonally mediated cancers, such as prostate and breast cancers. Concern has been elevated by published studies reporting a relationship between treatment with “low doses” of BPA and many of theses negative health outcomes in experimental studies in laboratory animals as well as in vitro studies identifying plausible molecular mechanisms that could mediate such effects. Importantly, much evidence suggests that these adverse effects are occurring in animals within the range of exposure to BPA of the typical human living in a developed country, where virtually everyone has measurable blood, tissue and urine levels of BPA that exceed the levels produced by doses used in the “low dose” animal experiments.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Digibug. Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad de Granada, instname
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4d0fcd7ae3c62f8d80269b54608a9337