Is Some Obesity due to Phthalates?

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Is some obesity due to Phthalates?

Obesity is now considered a disease by the US government. Unfortunately there is an avalanche of unscrupulous people playing games with this vunerable market.

Not a day goes by where we see a new television commercial promoting the best thing since apple pie on how to lose fat. Beefed up men and pretty models prance around the gym floor hoping to convince us that their new exercise contraption is going to save the day on ending the war against obesity.

Today’s article will focus on something that many people use on a daily basis and may not be privy to the negative impact it has on losing those unwanted pounds.

If you are like millions of people who has been disciplined to eat right and exercise only to find that you are stuck in losing fat, then you will find value in what I am about to share with you.

An abundance of medical research has shown that a major cause of the obesity epidemic is the abundant level of phthalates or plasticizers we all are subjected too on a regular basis.

According to the U.S. government phthalates or plasticizers is the number one pollutant in the human body.

In fact phthalates or plasticizers have been found to be 10,000 times higher than any of the thousands of other enironmental toxins.

What is even more alarming are children six years of age have levels that used to take adults until the age of 40 to accumulate.

A huge amount of government as well as other scientific and medical literature confirms how these these plasticizers are commonly found in our water, soda and infant formula bottles, food packaging, cosmetics, nail polish, mattresses, couches, carpets, clothing, medications, IVs, vinyl flooring, construction materials, home wiring, computers, Styrofoam® cups, industrial  and auto exhausts, etc.

A wealth of scientific and medical literature studies confirms that these toxins stockpile in the body and overwhelm our ability to detoxify them.

As crazy as this may seem, can you believe even in the cleanest areas of the world such as the Artic, scientists have found polar bears with human diseases such as hypothyroidism and osteoporosis all related to exposure of environmental toxins.

Hard to believe but true!

What is sad is the fact that a pregnant mother’s phthalate levels (look at how many are continually drinking from plastic water bottles, etc., thinking that it’s something healthful) hugely influence not only the development of the child’s brain and glands, but even future fertility and cancers in their unborn children, not to mention, of course, obesity.

It is strongly recommended that mother’s to be should have their phthalate (plastics) checked and if elevated need to detoxify these phthlates and metals and correct their nutrient deficiencies before they conceive.

If not, they increase the passing of these unavoidably sky high level of toxins onto the unborn.

I will commonly order a phthlate test to determine the level of exposure. Based on the results I will outline the best strategy to decrease the amount of plastics in the body.

In addition to obesity, elevated levels of phthlate have been associated with chronic fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia, ADD, syndrome X, diabetes, arteriosclerosis, allergies, and much more. 

I want you to remember that these plastic toxins make a beeline to your fat. Body fat has the unique ability to store a huge amount of these chemicals. So the fatter you are the more you may have of these environmental toxins. 

The bottom line is many people will never lose weight or cure their medical problems because they have not gotten rid of the phthalates and other environmental pollutants that have damaged their chemistry and genetics. 

** The laboratory that offers the Phthalate test is Metametrix (www.metametrix.com)



References: 
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Baillie-Hamilton PF, Chemical toxins: a hypothesis to explain the global obesity epidemic, J Alt Complement Med 8;2:185-92, 2002 
Alonso-Magdalena P, et al, The estrogenic effect of bisphenol A disrupts pancreatic B-cell function in vivo and induces insulin resistance, Environ Health Perspect 114:106-12, 2006
The Hundred Year Diet in the Wall Street (May 10, 2010, A15) 
Vom Saal FS, Welshons WV, Large effects from small exposures. II. The importance of positive controls in low-dose research on bisphenol A, Environ Res, 100;1:50-76, Jan. 2006 
Feige JN, et al, The endocrine disruptor monoethyl-hexyl phthalate is a selective peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma modulator that promotes adipogenesis, J Biol Chem 282:19152-66, 2007 
Hatch EE, et al., Association of urinary phthalate metabolite concentrations with a body mass index and waist circumference: a cross-sectional study of NHANES data, 1999-2002, Environ Health 7:27, 2008 
Clark K, et al, Observed concentrations in the environment. In: The Handbook of Environmental Chemistry, Vol 3, Part Q: Phthalate Ester (Staples CA, ed). New York: Springer, 125-177, 2003 
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Manikkam M, Tracey R, Guerrero-Bosagna C, Skinner MK. Plastics derived endocrine disruptors (BPA, DEHP and DBP) induce epigenetic transgenerational inheritance of obesity, reproductive disease and sperm epimutations. PLoS One. 2013;8(1)

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