| Literature DB >> 29872334 |
Abstract
Over recent years, many environmental pollutant chemicals have been shown to possess the ability to interfere in the functioning of the endocrine system and have been termed endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs). These compounds exist in air as volatile or semi-volatile compounds in the gas phase or attached to particulate matter. They include components of plastics (phthalates, bisphenol A), components of consumer goods (parabens, triclosan, alkylphenols, fragrance compounds, organobromine flame retardants, fluorosurfactants), industrial chemicals (polychlorinated biphenyls), products of combustion (polychlorinated dibenzodioxins/furans, polyaromatic hydrocarbons), pesticides, herbicides, and some metals. This review summarizes current knowledge concerning the sources of EDCs in air, measurements of levels of EDCs in air, and the potential for adverse effects of EDCs in air on human endocrine health.Entities:
Keywords: air pollution; endocrine disruptors; particulate matter
Year: 2018 PMID: 29872334 PMCID: PMC5973437 DOI: 10.2147/IJGM.S102230
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Gen Med ISSN: 1178-7074
Origins of air pollution from natural sources and from human activities
| Form | Compound(s) | Source – natural | Source – human activity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gases | Carbon dioxide (CO2) | Natural component – balanced between use in plant photosynthesis and release from animal respiration | Human activity is increasing levels especially through burning of fossil fuels and deforestation |
| Carbon monoxide | Wild fires | Incomplete combustion of fuel (natural gas, coal, wood, petrol) | |
| Sulfur oxides, especially sulfur dioxide (SO2) | Volcanoes | Industrial activities; excess combines with atmospheric water to cause acid rain | |
| Nitrogen oxides, especially nitrogen dioxide | Thunderstorms | High-temperature combustion | |
| Ammonia | Agricultural processes | ||
| Ground-level ozone | Combustion of fossil fuel | ||
| Volatile organic compounds | Natural methane; vegetation; animal and vegetable waste; sewage | Excess methane from industrial and agricultural processes; industrial pollutants; waste incineration (including burning of plastics); chlorofluorocarbons (air conditioners, refrigerators, aerosol sprays); consumer products (especially with added fragrance or volatile solvents) | |
| Particulate matter (solid particles and liquid droplets) | Dust, soil, acids, organic molecules including persistent organic pollutants, metals | Volcanoes, dust storms, forest fires, sea spray | Fuel combustion (motor vehicles, marine vessels, aircraft); power plants; industrial processes; cigarette smoking; consumer products (especially with volatile solvents or added fragrance); aerosol sprays (pesticides, herbicides, household cleaners, paints, glues, personal care products) |
| Radioactive pollutants | Radon gas from radioactive decay | Nuclear explosions |
Note: Shaded areas indicate sources of EDCs.
Abbreviation: EDCs, endocrine disrupting chemicals.
Figure 1Mechanisms of action of EDCs.
Note: Data from Darbre.5
Abbreviation: EDCs, endocrine disrupting chemicals.
Sources of endocrine disrupting chemicals measured in air
| Chemical | Use | Source of air pollution |
|---|---|---|
| Phthalates | Plasticizers to increase flexibility and transparency of plastic products | Plastics, personal care products, air fresheners |
| Bisphenol A | Manufacture of polycarbonate plastic and epoxy resins | Plastic consumer goods, bottles, sports equipment, CDs, DVDs, coating pipes and food cans, thermal paper |
| Parabens | Preservatives to prevent microbial action | Personal care products, pharmaceuticals, paper products |
| Triclosan | Antimicrobial | Hospital scrub, personal care products, kitchen utensils, toys |
| Alkylphenols | Detergents | Cleaning products, personal care products |
| Synthetic musks | Fragrance | Personal care products, household cleaning agents, air fresheners, candles |
| Polybrominated diphenyl ethers | Flame retardants | Soft furnishings |
| Perfluorooctanoic acid, perfluorooctanesulfonic acid | Stain resistance coatings | Soft furnishings, fabrics |
| Polychlorinated biphenyls | Industrial lubricants and coolants especially in electrical products | Restricted use since 1970s but ubiquitous persistent organic pollutants |
| Polychlorinated dibenzodioxins and dibenzofurans | None | By-products of combustion |
| Polyaromatic hydrocarbons | None | Incomplete combustion of organic materials |
| Organochlorine pesticides | Pesticides | Agricultural and domestic spraying |
| Pyrethroids | Pesticide | Agricultural and domestic spraying |
| Cadmium | Cigarettes | Cigarette smoke |
| Aluminum salts | Antiperspirant | Aerosol-format personal care products |
Figure 2Outline of the influences of EDCs on human health.
Notes: Oval boxes indicate broad health issues affected; square boxes indicate specific effects linked to EDCs. Data from Darbre.5
Abbreviation: EDCs, endocrine disrupting chemicals.