Friday, November 22, 2024
spot_img
HomeSexual-ReproductiveReproductive Toxin in Common Medications

Reproductive Toxin in Common Medications

Phthalates are chemical compounds that have been identified as causing adverse developmental and reproductive effects in laboratory animals.  Limited human studies have suggested a possible association of two phthalates – dibutyl phthalate (DBP) and diethyl phthalate (DEP) – with male reproductive health problems.  Katherine E Kelley, from Boston University’s Slone Epidemiology Center (Massachusetts, USA), and colleagues have found that phthalates are present in 50 prescription and 40 over-the-counter drugs. Added to medicines as an “inactive ingredient,” phthalates are purported to coat the drug product to target the delivery of the active ingredients to a specific area of the gastrointestinal tract, or to manage its release over time.  The team warns that: “Numerous [prescription] and [over-the-counter] drug products …  may use [phthalates] as excipients in oral dosage forms. The potential effects of human exposure to these phthalates through medications are unknown and warrant further investigation.”

Katherine E Kelley, Sonia Hernandez-Díaz, Erica L Chaplin, Russ Hauser, Allen A Mitchell.  “Identification of Phthalates in Medications and Dietary Supplement Formulations in the U.S. and Canada.”  Environmental Health Perspectives, 15 Dec 2011.

RELATED ARTICLES

Most Popular