More Kids Than Ever Are Obese — Commonly Used Chemicals May Be to Blame

Via The Defender

As obesity rates rise in the U.S., scientists are working to understand what’s driving the epidemic. While diet and exercise are major factors, these reviews point toward obesogens — chemical compounds believed to disrupt the metabolism — as an important contributor.

by Grace Van Deelen

obese kids chemicals feature

Many years ago, endocrinologist and medical doctor Robert Lustig had a patient, a 5-year-old girl, who was suffering from obesity. Unable to determine the cause of her obesity, Lustig scanned her for tumors.

The culprit was not a tumor, nor the girl’s diet, exercise, or family history. Rather, it was her body wash, said Lustig, a professor emeritus of Pediatrics, Division of Endocrinology at the University of California, San Francisco.

A Victoria’s Secret bath gel, labeled “For Adults Only,” had been the source of a chemical — phytoestrogen — in the girl’s blood known to spur obesity.

Phytoestrogen is found in plants and acts on the body’s estrogen receptors, which induces the production of fat cells. It’s one of a class of chemicals referred to as obesogens, according to a set of new reviews published in the journal Biochemical Pharmacology.

As obesity rates rise in the U.S., scientists are working to understand what’s driving the epidemic. While diet and exercise are major factors, these reviews point toward obesogens as another important but under-studied contributor.

The three reviews, which cover what obesogens are, how they cause obesity and methods for studying them, point out how paying attention to obesogens can help shift focus in obesity research from treatment to prevention.

Scientists also call for a reduction in exposure to obesogens, which are ubiquitous in everyday life, as a method to slow the obesity epidemic.

“They’re pretty much everywhere,” Jerry Heindel, a biochemist, founder and director of Healthy Environment and Endocrine Disruption Strategies and lead author on one of the reviews told Environmental Health News. “Pretty much everybody is going to [be exposed to] some of these obesogens.”

Endocrine-disrupting chemicals

Obesogens are a subset of endocrine-disrupting chemicals, which disrupt a body’s hormone activity.

Obesogens are generally defined as any chemical that can cause the human body to produce more fat than it normally would. These can include substances we usually think of as fattening, like sugars or artificial sweeteners.

Image credit: Obesity I: Overview and molecular and biochemical mechanisms, Biochemical Pharmacology.

However, many obesogens are not found in food, rather entering the body through other consumer products, like makeup, shampoos, soaps, plastics and cleaners. Obesogens can also get into food from pesticides and food packaging.

The chemicals are shed from such products and can accumulate in household dust, which people breathe in. PFAS, or per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (toxic chemicals used in many consumer and industrial products), are another example of obesogens, as is bisphenol-A (BPA).

Obesogens can act on the body in many different ways. For example, said Heindel, different obesogens can disrupt metabolism, cause the body to produce new fat cells, alter our eating behavior, and even disrupt the gastrointestinal tract and the way food is digested.

Obesity levels

In the U.S., obesity has risen steadily over the past decades, from 30% of adults in 2000 to 42% of adults in 2018. Obesity in children has risen as well, from 14% in 2000 to 19% in 2019.

Prevalence of self-reported obesity among U.S. adults by state, 2020. Image credit: CDC.

People think about obesity mostly in the context of calories — if you eat more calories than you burn, you’ll gain weight. To deal with obesity, many clinicians will advise reducing the number of calories eaten and increasing exercise.

Diet and exercise undoubtedly play a major role in obesity levels. However, the persistent rise in obesity in the U.S. indicates to Heindel that something besides diet and exercise is at play.

But with the lack of available tests to determine whether a person might be suffering from obesogen exposure or not, scientists are still unsure of the role that obesogens play in proportion to other factors like diet and exercise.

“There are so many multiple different factors going on, that we can’t pinpoint which one is doing what,” said Heindel.

Doctors and healthcare workers, he added, are “focused on the fact that obesity is due to over-eating. So if you are obese, you can take drugs, you can be on a diet, or you can have surgery. And that’s supposed to take care of the obesity.”

Bruce Blumberg, a professor of developmental biology at the University of California, Irvine, and an author of one of the reviews, agrees. He told Environmental Health News:

“That’s still the view of the medical community, that obesity really has everything to do with calories and activity and not much to do with anything else.”

The Centers for Disease Control, for example, does not list obesogens as a driver of obesity; instead, it lists diet, activity, sleep and genetics.

Ryan Baldwin, a spokesperson for the American Chemistry Council, an organization representing more than 190 chemical companies, pushed back against the new reviews.

Baldwin wrote in a statement to Environmental Health News:

“The prevailing view among the mainstream medical community is that obesity results from an imbalance between energy intake and expenditure caused by poor nutritional choices and insufficient exercise. The evidence to support this view is much larger and of much higher quality compared to the evidence cited by Heindel [and co-authors] to support their obesogen hypothesis.”

Who’s most vulnerable?

While exposure to obesogens as an adult can cause weight gain, there are specific periods in development when people are most susceptible to obesogen exposure.

Exposure is a particularly important consideration for pregnant people, the review warns, as the chemicals can pass through the placenta and affect the development of a fetus’s metabolic system in utero. That exposed fetus will have a higher risk of obesity later in life.

Young children are also more vulnerable to obesogens. During early childhood, the metabolic system is still under development, and susceptible to chemical influences.

The changes that these metabolic systems undergo in early childhood — such as obesogen exposure — are carried through to adulthood, putting the child at a higher risk of obesity.

Avoiding obesogens

Individuals can reduce their exposure by avoiding pre-packaged or processed foods, which often come in containers made with obesogens like PFAS or other plastic additives.

Avoiding fruits and vegetables treated with pesticides, or washing produce that has been sprayed, is another way to reduce exposure.

The authors of the reviews urge that obesogen exposure is such a widespread public health problem that it should be dealt with through regulation. For example, said Lustig, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) should take responsibility for testing for and regulating such chemicals.

That’s not happening, said Blumberg, because of a lack of will and funding within the EPA. “The EPA is heavily influenced by the industries that are regulated … that’s not the way they’re supposed to work,” he said.

Regardless, said Heindel, “it’s hurting people’s health, and hopefully [governments] will pay attention to that and act accordingly.”

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27 Comments
Meg
Meg
May 10, 2022 7:22 pm

Good grief.

tsquared
tsquared
May 10, 2022 7:46 pm

Prior to the introduction of hamburgers into the Japanize culture a large breasted woman was a B cup but most women were A cup size. Today a C cup is standard and D cups are not that uncommon.

I read that back in 2010 sitting in the Delta lounge while waiting on a flight 10 years ago.

Dark Thoughts
Dark Thoughts
  tsquared
May 10, 2022 8:51 pm

Sorry, why is that a bad thing?

Ghost
Ghost
  Dark Thoughts
May 10, 2022 9:01 pm

An A cup to D cup size is accompanied by a Small to XXLarge ass size.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
  Ghost
May 11, 2022 12:43 am

Ooh, that’s no good.

Boogieman
Boogieman
May 10, 2022 7:47 pm

Crock of bullshit, drop that shitty Ho Ho, poor out the fucking soda, put the god damn joy stick down, pick your ass up and get the hell outside and play.

Scary, I sound like my old man. God rest his soul.

Boogieman
Boogieman
  Boogieman
May 10, 2022 8:32 pm

Moms feed your kid a balanced diet, quit feeding them out of box or bag. Go to the store purchase some healthy food, go home and that thing in your kitchen that’s called a stove, go on the internet and learn how to make something with it. You won’t have a bunch of fat ass kids laying around in the living room watching YouTube and eating Mcdognuts latest quiseen.

Ken31
Ken31
  Boogieman
May 10, 2022 9:08 pm

^ this! That’s 90% of the battle.

Anthony Aaron
Anthony Aaron
  Boogieman
May 11, 2022 2:09 pm

Don’t forget … the many tens of millions of children fed by the taxpayer dollars at their local public schools … and, Moochie aside, one has to wonder about the nutritional value of what the children get there … plus whatever those 3d world folks feed their children at home on their EBT card …

another Doug
another Doug
May 10, 2022 8:28 pm

Chemistry of plastics will make you fat.

Zulu Foxtrot Golf
Zulu Foxtrot Golf
May 10, 2022 8:43 pm

Blame it all you want on the chemicals or whatever other bullshit there is. But please do not ever blame it on lazy fucks with shit diets. I couldnt eat enough when I was a kid to gain weight because I was always playing outside be it sports, ditch, tag or whatever. When I joined the service and had a hardcore exercise regimen that was heavy on the cardio side I had to eat at least two plates at every meal just to maintain weight. Point being: exercise and eating right will eliminate fat fucken wastes of space no matter the age unless there is a legitimate endocrine issue and not just a body fucken wash or whatever the flavor of the week is for blaming obesity on not being active or not having a good diet.

Power lifting or swimming will burn a fuck ton of calories be they shit ones or not. When I got into power lifting I could eat 6,000 to 8,000 calories a day and not gain a pound. Chocolate cake, pizza, steaks, fish, chickens, sodas and whatever else I could supplement caloric intake with. If there is a metabolic issue there are plenty of real chemicals out there that can boost your body and jumpstart that calorie burning. Just dont be a meathead.

Put down the Twinkie, get off the fucken cell phone/ tablet/ social media and get out in nature you lazy fucken shit bags.

ZFG, out.

P.S. eat moar chickin!

Then again we will need fatties in the near future when the famine hits. I kid. Or do I? Only empty stomachs will tell.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  Zulu Foxtrot Golf
May 10, 2022 9:25 pm

This.

People will stretch themselves into pretzels in order to maintain their illusions, but this one takes the cake. Kids are fat because of their body wash?

Okay.

oldvet50
oldvet50
  Zulu Foxtrot Golf
May 11, 2022 8:05 am

I was always amazed that when the US liberated the nazi concentration camps, there was not one person that had an endocrine system problem that made them fat. Diet and exercise – period!

Zulu Foxtrot Golf
Zulu Foxtrot Golf
  oldvet50
May 11, 2022 1:08 pm

Guess no one caught that sarcasm lol.

Dark Thoughts
Dark Thoughts
May 10, 2022 8:50 pm

I don’t need to lose weight.
I just need to move to Orlando.

Mushroom Cloud
Mushroom Cloud
May 10, 2022 9:19 pm

“I’m not fat; I have a glandular problem.”

“Which gland? The eating gland or the TV watching gland?”

Shotgun Trooper
Shotgun Trooper
  Mushroom Cloud
May 11, 2022 12:32 am

It’s my microwave hotwings gland. It’s killing me…

David
David
May 10, 2022 9:39 pm

Most midwestern groundwater is contaminated with another endocrine disruptor (and likely obesogen). Note the strong correlation between the corn-belt and obesity. Atrazine is used on nearly all corn in the US. Banned in the home country of the manufacturer years ago (Bayer/Germany). 0.1ppb is enough to cause a male frog to become female.

When I had our groundwater tested here in Michigan, the lab said they had to give atrazine testing to the state for some odd reason. Didn’t think much about it until results came back (none detected!). I then asked what the state’s minimum detectable level was? “Er… let’s see here… 5ppm.”. So in other words, the state of Michigan ensures that there’s no problem by requiring that they do the testing, and by using equipment that can only detect it at 50,000 times the level that will change the sex of a frog.

Breast and prostate cancer (not to mention obesity) run rampant here. Both are closely linked with Atrazine exposure. Ain’t it grand to live in a corporatocracy!?

Ken31
Ken31
  David
May 11, 2022 10:40 am

Another betrayal of the American people by the EPA/FDA. It is banned in Europe since 2004. I firmly believe that its teratogenic effects are being actively suppressed and there are many more trends in effected areas than just obesity. Europe probably side stepped the issue entirely by arguing it persists in ground water too long.

The Federal government wants to kill Americans for corporate profit and it always has. This has been the business model of the US government since its inception.

J&G
J&G
  David
May 11, 2022 12:44 pm

That study on Atrazine was done by UC Berkley and one Tyrone Davis.

Here is the paper from 2010.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2842049/

Some questionable “science”: The sample size: 40 frogs. Frog species was African.

That is CRAP for a university and screams out: AGENDA!

PhD’s at Berkely don’t know how to formulate correct sample sizes to promote legitimacy of their research/papers? Maybe the Agenda was “benevolent”…so, they bullshitted. Why use an African frog? Is that species far more susceptible to….stuff? Is that an “agenda frog”? I have no idea, but why not use a good old U.S. Bull Frog or something native?

In one group 40 males born males became males. In the other group exposed to Atrazine at 2.5 ppb, 36 males became males and 4 males became hermaphrodites.

Miniscule sample-size alone (and UC Berkeley Bias) discounts all results in this study/paper – and this is the one that claims as little as .1 ppb can change frog sex.

A sample size of 40 means, essentially, no real test was done. Minimum sample size for legitimacy is 1000 at the very minimum.

Atrazine may be truly horrible for frogs and other creatures and people. This research/paper isn’t the one that provides tons of evidence of that, though.

Observer
Observer
May 10, 2022 10:04 pm

pregnant people

WTF?

KaD
KaD
May 10, 2022 10:18 pm

I’d be willing to bet welfare preceded by single motherhood/fatherless homes has a good deal to do with it too.

Anonymous
Anonymous
May 11, 2022 12:25 am

67 years old and never had a weight issue till kidney failure due to an inherited condition that went full bore requiring a transplant . Drugs required to stay healthy with a transplant slow you down but I still am controlling my weight by moving my ass as much as possible . Push Ways is a good exercise , push your ass away from the table !
We also cook reasonable healthy meals .
Funny my oldest 2 nephews are morbidly obese , neither inherited the kidney disorder , both are great with their computers and grub hub , rarely cook anything , can barely fit in there cars a couple of lazy fat fucks no dating either ! Wonder why ??? LOL

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
May 11, 2022 12:17 pm

Only logical explanation: your nephews’ kidneys are working too well.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
May 11, 2022 12:44 am

I figured it was Mexicans raising the average.

Anonymous
Anonymous
May 11, 2022 7:35 am

I think it is interesting that conservatives are the driving force now behind exposing the corporate-government nexus as in this situation. I like it.

Jimmy123
Jimmy123
May 11, 2022 1:41 pm

We have to define what healthy food is.

I eat lots of fresh smoothies, coconut and olive oil, garbanzos, quinoa, wild salmon fish. Our water is filtered and free of fluoride. 80% or more of our food is organic.

I only eat 80% of what I need.

And I look 10-12 years younger.