Still Harming Health After All These Years
At the same time that I found out there were PCBs in my blood, 18,000 harbor seals died in the North Sea. Simultaneously, a viral infection that swept through the striped dolphin population in the Mediterranean Sea resulted in the deaths of 1,100 dolphins. In both situations, there was a correlation between levels of PCBs in the blood of the dead animals and weakened immune defense systems shown by lower white blood cell counts and antibody levels.
Editor's Note: This is the fifth installment in a series of posts delving into some of the the chemical pollutants that have contaminated Puget Sound's fish and wildlife and pose one of the greatest threats to their survival. This is part two of a two-part series, The Chemicals That Just Won't Go Away, that examines polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), which are still polluting people and the environment despite being banned over 30 years ago. For more context, read part one: Like An Unwelcome Guest, PCBs Just Won't Go Away.
This post was written by Dr. Fran Solomon, an environmental biologist who teaches courses and gives seminars for university students, environmental and health care professionals, and the general public about toxic chemicals and how they affect human health and the aquatic environment.
Lowered Resistance to Disease
Jim West explains how PCBs are still ending up in Puget Sound
Effects on Brain Development
Hormone Disruption
Photo attributions:
Seal courtesy of flicker user USFWS Pacific
Baby courtesy of flicker user efleming
1. Colburn, Theo, Dianne Dumanoski, and John Peterson Myers (1997). Our Stolen Future, Penguin Books, New York, N.Y.
2. West, Jim, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, Interview, May 17, 2011
3. Hickie, B.E., P.S.. Ross, R.W. MacDonald, and J.K.B. Ford (2007). “Killer whales (Orcinus orca) face protracted health risks associated with lifetime exposure to PCBs.” Environmental Science and Technology 41(18): 6613-6619.
4. Dallaire, Frederic, Eric Dewailly, Carole Vezina, Gina Muckle, Jean-Philippe Weber, Suzanne Bruneau, and Pierre Ayotte (2006). “Effect of prenatal exposure to polychlorinated biphenyls on incidence of acute respiratory infections in preschool Inuit children,” Environmental Health Perspectives 114: 1301-1425.
5. Jacobson, J.L.and S.W. Jacobson (1996). « Intellectual impairment in children exposed to polychlorinated biphenyls in utero.” New England Journal of Medicine 335: 783-789.
6. Gray, Janet, ed. (2008). State of the Evidence: What is the Connection Between the Environment and Breast Cancer? 5th edition, Breast Cancer Fund (http://www.breastcancerfund.org), San Francisco, CA.















