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BPA is a possible cause of obesity epidemic - Dr. Greger June 2019

How to Avoid BPA

Written By Michael Greger M.D. FACLM on June 18th, 2019

VitaminDWiki, etc

Highlights by VitaminDWiki

  • Weight increase in most people and domestic animals on the planet
  • BPA known to product fat cells in petrie dish
  • Stop canned and packaged foods for a few days ==> drop in BPA
  • Fast for a few days ==> 10X decrease of BPA in urine
  • Add soup (with BPA) to diet ==> 10X increase in BPA in urine
  • Higher levels of BPA and plastics found to be associated with increased weight gain

Would be intresting to find out

  • Are people who get little BPA less likely to become obese?
  • Are pets which get little BPA less likely to become obese?

A possible path
BPA==> Disrupts endocrine system
Which ==> reduces Vitamin D levels in tissue (not necessarily in blood)
Which ==> Increases weight gain


See also VitaminDWiki

Overview Obesity and Vitamin D contains the following summary

See also: Weight loss and Vitamin D - many studies   Child Obesity and Vitamin D - many studies   Obesity, Virus, and Vitamin D - many studies
Obese need more Vitamin D
Image

  • Normal weight     Obese     (50 ng = 125 nanomole)

Click here for 2014 study
Image

  • Normal weight     Obese     (50 ng = 125 nanomole)

See also web

  • We Have Dramatically Underestimated Our Exposure to Nasty Plastic Chemical BPA, Study Finds Gizmodo Dec 2019
    • " In some samples, levels were 44 times higher than the average exposure in people estimated by government data"
  • BPA: have flawed analytical techniques compromised risk assessments?] - Lancet
    •  Download the PDF from VitaminDWiki__
    • "By virtue of extensive research attention, bisphenol A (BPA) has become the so-called poster child for endocrine-disrupting chemicals. This high production (approximately 9 million tons per year) molecule is used in a wide range of consumer products (eg, plastics, epoxy resins, and thermal receipts), resulting in daily human exposure"
    • ... evidence of significant adverse effects at the lowest dose examined (2·5 μg/kg per day) which is 2000 X lower the the FDA upper limit


The purported link between obesity and hormone-disrupting plastics chemicals like bisphenol A (BPA) was initially based in part on observations that the rise in chemical exposure seemed to coincide with the rise of the obesity epidemic, but that may only be a coincidence. Many other changes over the last half century, like an increase in fast-food consumption and watching TV, would seem to be simpler explanations. But why are our pets getting fatter, too? Fido isn’t eating more fries or drinking more soda. Of course, the more we watch Seinfeld reruns, the less we may walk the dog, but what about our cats? They’re also getting fatter. Are we giving both them and our kids a few too many treats? That would seem to be an easier explanation than some pervasive obesity-causing chemical in the environment building up in the pet and person food chains.

How then do we explain the results of a study of more than 20,000 animals from 24 populations, showing they are all getting fatter? The odds that this could happen just by chance is about 1 in 10 million. The study’s “findings reveal that large and sustained population increases in body weight” are occurring across the board, even in those without access to vending machines or getting less physical education in schools. Perhaps some environmental pollutant is involved. I discuss this in my video How to Avoid the Obesity-Related Plastic Chemical BPA.

We’re exposed to a whole cocktail of new chemicals besides BPA, but the reason researchers have zeroed in on it is because of experiments showing that BPA can accelerate the production of new fat cells, at least in a petri dish. This was at more than a thousand times the concentration found in most people’s bloodstream, though. We didn’t know if the same thing happened at typical levels…until now. Most people have between 1 and 20 nanomoles of BPA in their blood, but even 1 nanomole may significantly boost human fat cell production. So, even low levels may be a problem, but that’s in a petri dish. What about in people?

Why not just measure the body weights of a population exposed to the chemical compared to a population not exposed to the chemical? There is virtually no unexposed population: BPA is everywhere. In that case, how about those with higher levels compared to those with lower levels? This is what researchers at New York University did, and the amount of BPA flowing through the bodies of children and adolescents “was significantly associated with obesity.” However, since it was a cross-sectional study, a snapshot in time, we don’t know which came first. Maybe instead of the high BPA levels leading to obesity, the obesity led to high BPA levels, since the chemical is stored in fat. Or, perhaps BPA is a marker for the same kinds of processed foods that can make you fat. What we need are prospective studies that measure exposure and then follow people over time. We never had anything like that…until now! And indeed, researchers found that higher levels of BPA and some other plastics chemicals were significantly associated with faster weight gain over the subsequent decade. So, how can we stay away from the stuff?

Though we inhale some from dust and get some through our skin touching BPA-laden receipts, 90 percent of exposure is from our diet. How can we tell? When we have people fast and drink water only out of glass bottles for a few days, their BPA levels drop as much as tenfold.

Fasting isn’t very sustainable, though.

What happens with a three-day fresh foods intervention, where families switch away from canned and packaged foods for a few days? A significant drop in BPA exposure. If we do the experiment the other way, adding a serving of canned soup to people’s daily diet, we see a thousand percent rise in BPA levels in their urine compared to a serving of soup prepared with fresh ingredients. That study used a ready-to-serve canned soup, which, in the largest survey of North American canned foods, was found to have about 85 percent less BPA than condensed soups, but the worst was canned tuna.


I previously touched upon bisphenol A in BPA Plastic and Male Sexual Dysfunction.
For more on BPA, see:

Phthalates are another concerning class of plastics chemicals.
I covered those in Avoiding Adult Exposure to Phthalates and What Diet Best Lowers Phthalate Exposure?.

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Created by admin. Last Modification: Wednesday December 18, 2019 20:37:13 GMT-0000 by admin. (Version 12)

Attached files

ID Name Comment Uploaded Size Downloads
13181 BPA flawed.pdf admin 18 Dec, 2019 370.08 Kb 1155