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1.
Journal of Environmental and Occupational Medicine ; (12): 782-787, 2023.
Artículo en Chino | WPRIM | ID: wpr-979193

RESUMEN

Background Parabens, a widely used class of preservatives, are suspected to be potential obesogens as emerging endocrine disrupting chemicals with reproductive and developmental toxicity. Objective To analyze five urinary parabens (PBs) and estimate the associations of exposure to PBs with adiposity measures in 10-year-old school-age children. Methods A total of 471 school-age children aged 10 years from the Sheyang Mini Birth Cohort were enrolled in this study. A questionnaire survey was conducted to collect socio-demographic information, physical activity, and dietary intake. Weight, height, and waist circumference of children were measured, and age- and sex-adjusted body mass index (BMI-Z score) was calculated. Spot urine samples were collected during the follow-up visits. Urinary concentrations of five PBs including methyl-paraben (MeP), ethyl-paraben (EtP), propyl-paraben (PrP), butyl-paraben (BuP), and benzyl-paraben (BzP) were detected by gas chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (GC-MS/MS). Generalized linear models (GLMs) and Bayesian kernel machine regression (BKMR) models were applied to estimate associations of individual/overall urinary PBs concentrations with BMI Z-score and waist circumference. Results The positive rates of selected five urinary PBs were in the range from 78.98% to 98.94%. The urinary PBs concentrations (geometric mean) were in the range of 0.31-5.43 μg·L−1. The children's BMI Z-score and waist circumference (mean ± standard deviation) were (0.56±1.40) and (67.62±10.07) cm respectively. The GLMs results showed that the urinary BzP concentration was negatively associated with waist circumference (b=−0.08, 95%CI: −0.14, −0.02; P=0.01). In sex-stratified analysis, the urinary concentration of BzP was negatively associated with BMI-Z score (b=−0.59, 95%CI: −0.88, −0.30; P<0.001) and waist circumference (b=−0.80, 95%CI: −1.23, −0.37; P<0.001) in boys, but not in girls. The BKMR results also found significant negative correlations of urinary BzP concentrations with BMI-Z score and waist circumference, which were consistent with the GLM results. Conclusion The selected 10-year-old children are extensively exposed to PBs in the study area. Furthermore, childhood PBs exposure may have potential impacts on childhood adiposity measures with sex-specific effects.

2.
Artículo en Inglés | LILACS-Express | LILACS | ID: biblio-1148223

RESUMEN

Objective: To summarize evidence regarding the toxic potential of administering parabenscontaining cosmetics in humans. Methods: The systematic review followed the methodology proposed in Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyzes (PRISMA). Electronic searches of the PubMed, Virtual Health Library (BVS), and Science Direct databases were performed between October 1st and 31st, 2018. No language restriction was determined. Original articles reporting observational, in vitro and in silico studies of toxicity caused by parabens in human or human cells were considered for eligibility. Two independent reviewers performed data extraction and assessed the methodological quality and risk of bias of articles by using the Downs & Black Scale. Score levels greater than 70% were assumed to reflect good methodological quality. The Kappa coefficient was calculated. Results: A total of 254 studies were found. Following the eligibility evaluation, 22 studies were included for the qualitative synthesis. The concordance between the reviewers was substantial (Kappa coefficient = 0.650). The meaningful reported outcomes were: high concentrations of parabens in the body; apoptosis damage to sperm DNA; oxidative stress; DNA damage; irritative potential; interference in the control of adipogenesis; estrogenic activity; genotoxicity; necrosis; role in carcinogenesis of breast cancer; harmful effects on human skin when exposed to the sun; stimulation of oncogenes expression; and interference with DNA transcription. Despite most included articles presenting appreciable methodological quality, remarkable limitations were observed and the mechanisms by which parabens exert toxicity on humans remained unclear. Conclusions: The accumulation of parabens in the human organism following repeated cosmetics administration on the skin is noteworthy. However overall, the evidence so far does not make it possible to determine whether, and in what extent, the use of paraben-containing cosmetics can disturb human health. Further investigations are still required for clarifying these issues.

3.
Journal of Korean Academy of Oral Health ; : 154-161, 2017.
Artículo en Coreano | WPRIM | ID: wpr-194227

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to investigate changes in public recognition of parabens on Twitter and the research status of parabens related to toothpaste. METHODS: Tweet information between 2010 and October 2016 was collected by an automatic web crawler and examined according to tweet frequency, key words (2012-October 2016), and issue tweet detection analyses to reveal changes in public recognition of parabens on Twitter. To investigate the research status of parabens related to toothpaste, queries such as “paraben,”“paraben and toxicity,”“paraben and (toothpastes or dentifrices),” and “paraben and (toothpastes or dentifrices) and toxicity” were used. RESULTS: The number of tweets concerning parabens sharply increased when parabens in toothpaste emerged as a social issue (October 2014), and decreased from 2015 onward. However, toothpaste and its related terms were continuously included in the core key words extracted from tweets from 2015. They were not included in key words before 2014, indicating that the emergence of parabens in toothpaste as a social issue plays an important role in public recognition of parabens in toothpaste. The issue tweet analysis also confirmed the change in public recognition of parabens in toothpaste. Despite the expansion of public recognition of parabens in toothpaste, there are only seven research articles on the topic in PubMed. CONCLUSIONS: The general public clearly recognized parabens in toothpaste after emergence of parabens in toothpaste as a social issue. Nevertheless, the scientific information on parabens in toothpaste is very limited, suggesting that the efforts of dental scientists are required to expand scientific knowledge related to parabens in oral hygiene measures.


Asunto(s)
Higiene Bucal , Parabenos , Pastas de Dientes
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