| Literature DB >> 34069956 |
Yufei Wang1,2, Haifeng Qian1.
Abstract
Phthalates are a series of widely used chemicals that demonstrate to be endocrine disruptors and are detrimental to human health. Phthalates can be found in most products that have contact with plastics during producing, packaging, or delivering. Despite the short half-lives in tissues, chronic exposure to phthalates will adversely influence the endocrine system and functioning of multiple organs, which has negative long-term impacts on the success of pregnancy, child growth and development, and reproductive systems in both young children and adolescents. Several countries have established restrictions and regulations on some types of phthalates; however, we think that more countries should establish constraints or substitute measures for phthalates to reduce health risks. This article aims to summarize the adverse impacts of phthalates on human health, analyze the toxicity mechanism, assess the risks, and finally provide feasible strategies to reduce exposure of the public to phthalates.Entities:
Keywords: child growth; endocrine disruptors; health impact; plastics; risk assessment
Year: 2021 PMID: 34069956 PMCID: PMC8157593 DOI: 10.3390/healthcare9050603
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Healthcare (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9032
Common phthalate compounds.
| Compounds | Abbreviation | Where It Can Be Found | Also Named As |
|---|---|---|---|
| Diethylhexyl phthalate | DEHP | Plasticizer | Di-2-ethylhexyl phthalate; |
| Dibutyl phthalate | DBP | Nail polishers; plasticizer; an additive to | Di-n-butyl phthalate, DnBP, DNBP |
| Diethyl phthalate | DEP | Toothbrushes; automobile parts; tools; toys; food packaging; cosmetics; | Ethyl phthalate; Di-n-ethyl phthalate |
| Di-isononyl phthalate | DiNP | Plasticizer | Bis(7-methyloctyl) phthalate; DINP |
| Di-iso-decyl phthalate | DiDP | Plasticizer | Di(i-decyl) phthalate; diisodecyl |
| Butyl benzyl phthalate | BBP | Plasticizer | Benzyl n-butyl phthalate; n-Butyl |
| Mono-(2- ethylhexyl) phthalate | MEHP | Vinyl tiles; food conveyor belts; carpet tile; | tert-Butyldimethylsilyl 2-ethylhexyl phthalate |
| Di-isobutyl phthalate | DiBP | Plasticizer; adhesive | Di(i-butyl)phthalate; Isobutyl phthalate; |
| Dioctyl phthalate | DnOP | Household items and building products; | Di-n-octyl phthalate; DNOP |
Figure 1The metabolic pathway for phthalates.
Health impacts on children.
| Category | Health Concerns |
|---|---|
| Endocrine systems | Weight (overweight and obesity) and height |
| Type II diabetes and insulin resistance | |
| Thyroid function and increased risk of thyroid cancer | |
| Higher systolic blood pressure | |
| Anogenital distance | |
| Precocious puberty | |
| Males: genital development, semen quality | |
| Females: pregnancy outcome (pregnancy loss and preterm birth, low birth weight), reproductive hormones (including lueinizing hormone, sex hormone-binding globulin, earlier menopause) | |
| Others | Respiratory system: allergy and asthma |
Restrictions in Japan, Europe, the US, Australia, and China.
| Country | Restrictions |
|---|---|
| Japan [ | DiNP and DEHP are banned in toys; DEHP is banned in food-handling gloves |
| Europe [ | DEHP, DBP, DiBP, and BBP are banned in all PVC and plasticized toys and childcare articles; DiNP, DiDP, and DnOP are banned for products that can be placed in children’s mouth |
| The United States [ | Products containing DEHP, DBP, and BBP at levels >0.1% by weight shall be banned, especially children’s toys, and childcare articles; children’s products that can be placed in a child’s mouth or childcare articles containing more than 0.1% of DiNP, DiDP, and DnOP are banned |
| Australia [ | Children’s plastic products containing, or have a component containing more than 1% by weight DEHP |
| China (National Standard of the People’s Republic of China) | 16 phthalates are restricted in food and food containers, including DNP, DnOP, DEHP, DiNP, DiBP, BBP, etc; dissolved DEHP in transfusion (infusion) equipment is restricted to less than 10 mg/mL; the total amount of DEHP, BBP, DBP in childcare articles should not be more than 0.1%. |
Figure 2Phthalates application and the impacts on human health.