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Foods that were contaminated in Michigan
in 1973, when a fire retardant containing the chemical polybrominated
biphenyl (PBB) was accidentally mixed with animal feed, have
been associated with an early onset of menstruation and pubic hair in
some daughters of the women exposed to PBB.
The daughters of the most highly exposed
women began menstruation, on average, before they reached their twelfth
birthdays.
In 1973, a fire retardant containing PBBs, was mistakenly
mixed with cattle feed in place of a feed
additive. The contamination was eventually discovered when milk production
went down and calves were stillborn or born with hoof deformities. By
the time the source of the PBBs was identified, at least 4,000
people had been exposed through contaminated meat and dairy
products.
PBB accumulates in fatty tissue in the body and is stored
for years. In the current study, researchers contacted female offspring,
five to 24 years of age, born after the Michigan PBB incident to mothers
listed as exposed to PBB in the Michigan
PBB registry.
Those with earliest menstruation were daughters of mothers with the highest
estimated serum levels of PBBs during pregnancy, who had also nursed their
infant daughters, giving them both prenatal and breast milk exposures.
In the PBB study, the most highly exposed girls were a year ahead in
starting their periods, at 11.6 years compared to 12.7 years for less-exposed
girls.
This study lends support to the hypothesis that events associated with
puberty may be affected by pre- and postnatal exposure to PBBs.
This is the second study to associate early puberty with exposure to
a specific chemical. The first study, by Ivelisse Colon and co-authors,
appearing in the September 2000 issue of the NIEHS journal Environmental
Health Perspectives, associated precocious puberty in young girls in Puerto
Rico with the plasticizer chemicals called phthalates.
The largest study to date to determine the incidence of precocious puberty
in the United States was published by Marcia Herman-Giddens in the journal
Pediatrics in 1997, and with a sample size of 17,000
showed that one in every seven Caucasian
girls and one out of every two African-American girls develop breasts
or pubic hair before the age of eight.
In the current study, the girls who were most highly
exposed to PBBs had pubic hair at an earlier age than less-exposed
girls. However there were no differences found in timing of breast development.
Journal of Epidemiology,
November 2000
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