Is Organic a Scam? – Fetal and Child Development and Antibiotic
Resistance
by
Mark Sisson
Mark’s Daily Apple
Recently
by Mark Sisson: Choose
Your Booze: A Guide to Healthy Drinking
A few weeks
ago in Weekend
Link Love, I mentioned the great big much-ballyhooed study that
appeared to show organic produce was no more healthy than conventional
produce. Many people with an axe to grind championed its findings,
with some proclaiming the undeniable ringing of the final death
knell of organic farming. Science Based Medicine wasted no time
in weighing in on the current state of organic food, which they
said “represents the triumph of marketing over scientific
reality.” Strong words, words that seem to be – at first
glance – supported by the study in question. But are they?
Are you falling for marketing hype when you buy organic? Is it worth
it?
Today, I’m
going to discuss the impact of organic and conventional food on
two aspects of wellness: fetal health and development and antibiotic
resistance. I’ll follow this post up with more articles in
coming weeks on the differences between organic and conventional
food, and give my opinions on their impact on your health so that
you can make an informed decision for yourself. Consider this Part
1 in a series.
Fetal Health
and Development
It may be that
humans are able to withstand chronic, low-level pesticide exposure
without any glaringly negative health effects arising. Heck, maybe
the occasional shot of organophosphate pesticide provides a hormetic,
net-beneficial effect (I wouldn’t bet on it)! But what about
the kids, the tots, the fetuses, the embryos? Might it be possible
that what bounces off the thick manly hide of a fully-developed
adult human with nary a flick of the eye could throw a wrench in
the gears of fetal development? Perhaps the unabashed skeptic who
instead of rinsing pesticides off his peach with water rinses water
off his peach with pesticides can get away with it, while the pregnant
woman craving peaches and Greek yogurt would be better off going
organic. I suspect it might.
Earlier this
year, a guy named David Bellinger also suspected it might, and so
he looked
at several studies which examined the relationship between prenatal
exposure to organophosphate pesticides (in addition to other environmental
pollutants) and cognitive development:
In one study,
a ten-fold increase in DAP urine metabolites of pregnant women (the
more organophosphates you take in, the more DAP urine metabolites
you produce) meant a 4.25 point loss in IQ of their children.
Another study
found that the same increase was associated with a loss of 1.39
points.
And in 2007,
researchers found that “prenatal levels of organophosphate
pesticide metabolites are associated with anomalies in primitive
reflexes [in the children], which are a critical marker of neurologic
integrity.”
Bellinger didn’t
cover them all, though. There’s considerable evidence that
chlorpyrifos, a pesticide often used on apple crops, causes
brain abnormalities – thinning in some areas, enlargements
in others – in children with significant prenatal exposure.
Fetal organophosphate exposure has also been linked to ADHD
(especially in boys).
Of course,
these studies can’t establish causality, and it would be unethical
and highly illegal to conduct controlled trials in which pregnant
mothers were dosed with pesticides and fungicides to see how their
offspring were affected, but we can look at animal studies to get
an idea. Although the results are a bit mixed, this review (PDF)
generally concludes that the older studies on organophosphate pesticides
found them to be “safe,” while the more recent animal
studies find evidence of mutagenic and teratogenic effects, particularly
on the fetus.
Read
the rest of the article
Listen
to Lew's recent podcast with Mark Sisson
October 4, 2012
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