A recent UNMC study has found that farm women who work with common pesticides have a greater risk of thyroid disease.
During the Agricultural Health Study, a long-term study of licensed pesticide applicators, UNMC researchers found 12.5 percent of the farm women studied had thyroid disease compared to 1 to 8 percent in the general population.
The researchers evaluated five commonly used insecticides and 39 other pesticides in the study — which was published in the American Journal of Epidemiology.
“There is increasing evidence that environmental exposure to pesticides should be considered a potential risk factor for thyroid disease,” said Whitney Goldner, M.D., assistant professor in the UNMC Department of Internal Medicine and one of the paper’s authors.
From left: Whitney Goldner, M.D., Tricia LeVan, Ph.D., and Fang Yu, Ph.D., recently authored a study that showed a potential link between some farm chemicals and thyroid disease. The study was published in the American Journal of Epidemiology. |
Though the data in the study focused on Iowa and North Carolina, farm practices are similar in Nebraska. The study is the first and largest to show an association between pesticide exposure and thyroid disease.
Thyroid disease, which includes hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism, when left untreated can be serious. Symptoms of hypothyroidism — an underactive thyroid — include weight gain, fatigue, hair and skin changes, and sensitivity to cold temperatures. Hyperthyroidism — an overactive thyroid — can be associated with weight loss, higher heart rate, eye and skin changes and heat sensitivity.
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The study showed an association between insecticides and fungicide exposure and hypothyroidism. There was also an association between one of the fungicides and hyperthyroidism.
Dr. Goldner added that it’s important that those exposed to pesticides be aware of the potential risks and know the signs and symptoms of thyroid disease.