Here’s what your
hair and nails tell about your health
Researchers have found that hair, toenails and fingernails
can provide an easy way to measure how much one is exposed to potentially
harmful chemicals called flame retardants, which are frequently added to
plastic, foam, wood and textiles. Exposure to flame retardants in various forms
has been linked to obesity, learning disabilities, neuro and reproductive
toxicity, and endocrine disruption. ‘Little is known about the human exposure
to flame retardants, especially new classes of the retardants,’ said one of the
researcher Amina Salamova from Indiana University Bloomington in the US. ‘The
first step is to establish a relatively easy and reliable way of measuring
chemical levels in people, especially children, and we’ve determined that hair
and nails can provide exactly that,’ Salamova noted.
Until now, researchers depended on samples of human milk,
blood and urine, and those samples are more difficult to obtain than hair and
nails. For the study, published in the journal Environmental Science and
Technology, the researchers collected hair, fingernails and toenails from 50
students in Bloomington and compared the levels of chemicals found in those
samples with what was found in blood from the same people. Salamova and
colleagues found that there was a strong relationship between the levels of a
large group of flame retardants, the polybrominated diphenyl ethers or PBDEs,
in hair and nails, on the one hand, and those in serum, on the other.
Source: www.thehealthsite.com
04.03.2016
Be great in act, as you have been in thought
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