Of interest?
In the 3 December 2005 issue of New Scientist magazine, I found this:
Pesticide link to breast growth
"Exposure to pesticides in the womb may change when and how breasts develop
in young girls."
My synopsis: A preliminary study in Mexico, of 50 girls aged 8-10, both from
the same traditional Mayan group, similar in income, diet and lifestyle,
assessed breast growth among two subgroups: one from a valley where pesticides
were regularly applied while the other half lived in foothills without. ( The
article stated the girls in the foothills were children of ranchers, and I
suppose the assumption is that no pesticides were applied to the animals, I
wonder what might have been in their feed, but no one looked at that...)
"Girls from the valley had larger breasts than those from the foothills, but
LESS MAMMARY GLAND TISSUE( Environmental Health Perspectives,
DOI:10.1289/ehp.8280). [ Caps are mine for emphasis]
In the past, obesity has been linked to early puberty, but measurements
of the girls' body mass index ruled this out as the cause of differences in
breast development. Previous studies identified organochlorine pesticides in
umbilical cord blood from children born in the valley around the same time as
the girls in this study."
I wonder what the implications for breast function is, when these girls come
of age to birth and babyfeeding...
Judy
Judy LeVan Fram, PT, IBCLC, LLLL, Brooklyn, NY, USA
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