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Study by UTHSCT doctors, ETMC physician shows use of organic pesticides like rotenone may raise risk of Parkinson’s
A recent study by physicians and researchers at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Tyler and an East Texas Medical Center physician indicates use of the organic pesticides like rotenone may increase the risk of developing Parkinson’s disease. “The study results showed an increased risk of developing Parkinson’s disease with a history of personal use of organic pesticides such as rotenone,” said the study’s lead author, Amon Dhillon, MD, MS, assistant professor of occupational and environmental medicine at UTHSCT. Rotenone's toxicity “In this study, people with Parkinson’s disease were 10 times more likely to have used rotenone than individuals in the control group,” Dr. Levin said. A total of 184 people participated in the study: 100 had Parkinson’s disease and 84 did not, though they had other neurological disorders. Patients studied Parkinson's is a neurodegenerative syndrome, affecting over 1.5 million people nationally, Dr. Plotkin said. There’s a higher incidence of Parkinson’s in certain industries, including farming and petroleum. “While epidemiologists have looked at a number of areas in the United States, this study is the first detailed account of exposure history in Parkinson's patients, in East Texas, as compared with age-matched controls,” Dr. Plotkin said. “The results are rather striking, and reflect our notion that environmental agents may well affect individuals predisposed to developing the disease. Future research will need to focus on determining how this happens, with the hope that more careful management of hazardous materials will reduce the chances of Parkinson’s disease developing in persons at risk,” he said. Questionnaire utilized Though pesticide use has been linked to Parkinson’s disease, this is one of the first studies to show a possible correlation between a specific pesticide – rotenone – and Parkinson’s disease in humans, Dr. Dhillon said. Other pesticides “It seems to be a combination of genes and environment that causes the development of Parkinson’s disease. This study examined one of many factors that may cause Parkinson’s,” Dr. Levin said. “Part of the role of public health is to identify the risk factors for disease. If we can identify them, then people can avoid risk factors such as rotenone and hopefully prevent the disease,” Dr. Levin said. Dr. Levin and Dr. Dhillon praised the collaboration between scientists and physicians at UT Health Science Center at Tyler and ETMC, saying the study couldn’t have been done without Dr. Plotkin and his staff’s help. “The next step is to verify the results of this study. We think there’s potential to do a broader study examining more risk factors, with more individuals,” Dr. Levin said. The Journal of Agromedicine publishes articles on agriculture and human disease. It is peer-reviewed, which means that other experts in the field review and approve all articles before they are published. Besides Dr. Dhillon, Dr. Levin, and Dr. Plotkin, other authors of the study are G. Lester Tarbutton, MD, MPH, of Longview Occupational Medicine Clinic; Larry K. Lowry, Ph.D., professor in UTHSCT’s Department of Occupational Health Sciences; J. Torey Nalbone, Ph.D., CIH (certified industrial hygienist), associate professor in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at The University of Texas at Tyler; and Sara Shepherd, MAMS (Master of Applied Mathematical Sciences), database manager in UTHSCT’s Department of Occupational Health Sciences at UTHSCT.
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