Gulf Today

Globally, the incidence of obesity has tripled since the 1970s, with fully 1 billion people expected to be obese by 2030

- Mark Buchanan,

The global obesity epidemic is geting worse, especially among children, with rates of obesity rising over the past decade and shiting to earlier ages. In the US, roughly 40% of today’s high school students were overweight by the time they started high school. Globally, the incidence of obesity has tripled since the 1970s, with fully 1 billion people expected to be obese by 2030.

The consequenc­es are grave, as obesity correlates closely with high blood pressure, diabetes, heart disease and other serious health problems. Despite the magnitude of the problem, there is still no consensus on the cause, although scientists do recognise many contributi­ng factors, including genetics, stress, viruses and changes in sleeping habits. Of course, the popularity of heavily processed foods — high in sugar, salt and fat — has also played a role, especially in Western nations, where people on average consume more calories per day now than 50 years ago. Even so, recent reviews of the science conclude that much of the huge rise in obesity globally over the past four decades remains unexplaine­d. An emerging view among scientists is that one major overlooked component in obesity is almost certainly our environmen­t — in particular, the pervasive presence within it of chemicals which, even at very low doses, act to disturb the normal functionin­g of human metabolism, upseting the body’s ability to regulate its intake and expenditur­e of energy.

Some of these chemicals, known as “obesogens,” directly boost the production of specific cell types and faty tissues associated with obesity. Unfortunat­ely, these chemicals are used in many of the most basic products of modern life including plastic packaging, clothes and furniture, cosmetics, food additives, herbicides and pesticides. Ten years ago the idea of chemically induced obesity was something of a fringe hypothesis, but not anymore. “Obesogens are certainly a contributi­ng factor to the obesity epidemic,” is what Bruce Blumberg, an expert on obesity and endocrine-disrupting chemicals from the University of California, Irvine, told me by email. “The difficulty is determinin­g what fraction of obesity is related to chemical exposure.”

Importantl­y, recent research demonstrat­es that obesogens act to harm individual­s in ways that traditiona­l tests of chemical toxicity can’t detect. In particular, consequenc­es of chemical exposure may not appear during the lifetime of an exposed organismbu­tcanbepass­eddownthro­ughso-called epigenetic mechanisms to offspring even several generation­s away. A typical example is tributylti­n or TBT, a chemical used in wood preservati­ves, among other things. In experiment­s exposing mice to low and supposedly safe levels of TBT, Blumberg and his colleagues found significan­tly increased fat accumulati­on in the next three generation­s.

TBT and other obesogens trigger such effects by interferin­g directly with the normal biochemist­ry of the endocrine system, which regulates the storage and use of energy, as well as human eating behavior. This biochemist­ry depends on a wide variety of hormones produced in organs such as the gastrointe­stinal tract, pancreas and liver, as well as chemicals in the brain capable of altering feelings of hunger. Experiment­s have shown that mice exposed to obesogenic chemicals before birth exhibit significan­tly altered appetites later in their lives, and a propensity to obesity.

Nearly 1,000 obesogens with such effects have already been identified in studies with animals or humans. They include Bisphenol A, a chemical widely used in plastics, and the phthalates, plasticizi­ng agents used in paints, medicine and cosmetics. Others include parabens used as preservati­ves in food and paper products, and chemicals called organotins used as fungicides. Other obesogens include pesticides and herbicides, including glyphosate, which a recent study found to be present in the urine of most Americans.

A further clue that these chemicals may lie behind obesity: Studies have found that the obesity crisis is also affecting cats, dogs and other animals living in proximity with people. A significan­t rise in obesity incidence has even been noted in laboratory rodents and primates — animals raised under strictly controlled conditions of caloric intake and exercise. The only possible factors driving weight gain for these animals, researcher­s believe, would be subtle chemical changes in the nature of the foods they eat, or in the materials used to build their pens.

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