Many issues contribute to Miscarriage: BPA exposure
during pregnancy raises miscarriage risk
Many issues contributing to miscarriage:
1.
Possibly over Three Thousand Miscarriages:
CDC Still Lying about H1N1 Vaccine Safety
2.
Antidepressants during pregnancy cause
alarming 68 percent increased risk of miscarriage
3.
Vaccines and Pregnancy Do Not Mix
4.
Drinking Caffeine During Pregnancy Doubles
Risk of Miscarriage
5.
Eating fruits and vegetables cuts risk of
miscarriage, says study
6.
Chocolate found to reduce risk of
miscarriage
The adverse reproductive effects of the plastics
chemical bisphenol A (BPA) have once again been demonstrated in the scientific
literature. Researchers from Stanford University in California found that the
more BPA circulating in a pregnant woman's bloodstream, the greater her chances
of having a miscarriage.
Among 115 pregnant women tested as part of the
research, 68 had miscarriages, a percentage roughly three times higher than
that of the general population. Upon further investigation, a direct
correlation between BPA levels and miscarriage rates was observed,
substantiating a growing consensus that BPA directly interferes with human
reproduction.
According to Environmental Health News (EHN), all of
the women had been admitted to Stanford's fertility clinic within four weeks of
fertilization, and each was tested for BPA levels prior to treatment. The women
were then divided into four groups based on their BPA measurements to evaluate
the miscarriage rate.
Leading the pack was the group of women with the highest
levels of BPA, who were found to be 83 percent more likely than the others to
have a miscarriage. Women in the second- and third-highest exposure groups also
bore high risks at 58 percent and 30 percent, respectively. At the bottom with
the lowest miscarriage risk were women with low circulating BPA levels.
Though a causal link between BPA and miscarriage was
not established by this particular study, the correlative findings are strongly
suggestive of one. They also back earlier research tying BPA exposure to
general infertility, including a 2013 study out of Massachusetts that
identified increased difficulties getting pregnant among couples where BPA
exposure was high.
"Couples suffering from infertility or recurrent
miscarriages would be best advised to reduce BPA exposure because it has the
potential to adversely affect fetal development," wrote the authors of the
new study.
FDA ignores science, insists BPA is safe
With more than 90 percent of the general public now
believed to be contaminated with BPA, these findings are definitely
disheartening. Cases of infertility, miscarriage and birth defects are already
on the rise due to other sources of environmental pollution, and adding BPA
into the mix only makes the problem worse.
Data gathered last summer by researchers from Brigham
and Women's Hospital in Boston found that BPA directly inhibits the normal
development of human eggs. Providing further details as to how BPA obstructs
normal human reproduction, the research, which was published in the journal
Human Reproduction, showed that BPA decreases the likelihood that eggs will
fully mature.
"Our data show that BPA exposure can dramatically
inhibit egg maturation and adds to a growing body of evidence about the impact
of BPA on human health," wrote Dr. Catherine Racowsky, one of the authors
of this earlier study. "I would encourage further research to gain a
greater understanding of the role BPA plays in infertility."
Further research has been conducted all across the
globe, and much of it has come to similar conclusions. And yet the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration (FDA), in complete denial of science, remains insistent
that BPA at current exposure levels is perfectly safe, a lie that continues to
harm the public.
When the FDA recently issued its own study that claimed
to prove BPA's safety for humans, many academic scientists were outraged to
find that the controls used in the study were deliberately contaminated. As it
turns out, both the controls and the subjects had been exposed to BPA,
completely invalidating the FDA study.
"It's basic science," stated Gail S. Prins, a
professor of physiology at the University of Illinois at Chicago to Mother
Jones. "If your controls are contaminated, you've got a failed experiment
and the data should be discarded. I'm baffled that any journal would even
publish this."
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