Abstract

The exponential growth of pollutant discharges into the environment due to increasing industrial and agricultural activities is a rising threat for human health and a biggest concern for environmental health globally. Several synthetic chemicals, categorized as potential environmental endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs), are evident to affect the health of not only livestock and wildlife but also humankind. In recent years, human exposure to environmental EDCs has received increased awareness due to their association with altered human health as documented by several epidemiological and experimental studies. EDCs are associated with deleterious effects on male and female reproductive health; causes diabetes, obesity, metabolic disorders, thyroid homeostasis and increase the risk of hormone-sensitive cancers. Sewage effluents are a major source of several EDCs, which eventually reach large water bodies and potentially contaminate the drinking water supply. Similarly, water storage material such as different types of plastics also leaches out EDCs in drinking Water. Domestic wastewater containing pharmaceutical ingredients, metals, pesticides and personal care product additives also influences endocrine activity. These EDCs act via various receptors through a variety of known and unknown mechanisms including epigenetic modification. They differ from classic toxins in several ways such as low-dose effect, non-monotonic dose and trans-generational effects. This review aims to highlight the hidden burden of EDCs on human health and discusses the non-classical toxic properties of EDCs in an attempt to understand the magnitude of the exposome on human health. Present data on the environmental EDCs advocate that there may be associations between human exposure to EDCs and several undesirable health outcomes that warrants further human bio-monitoring of EDCs.

Highlights

  • Effects of environmental pollution on human health are increasingly gaining more attention globally

  • Summed metabolites of butyl phthalates or di-(2-ethylhexyl) phthalates were significantly associated with T2D only in the NHSII; odds ratio (OR) comparing extreme quartiles were 3.16 and 1.91, respectively Persistent organic pollutants (POPs) showed non-linear associations with diabetes risk

  • Most of the information on the detrimental effect of endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) comes from animal studies

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Summary

Introduction

Effects of environmental pollution on human health are increasingly gaining more attention globally. Environmental pollutants are chemicals that result from human activities, which end up in the environment and subsequently pose risks to human and animal health Several of these chemicals are collectively known as endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs), which are nowadays gaining more importance in terms of public health due to their widespread effects on human health and potential cause of morbidity. Environmental EDCs are mostly released during manufacture and use of human-made materials such as pesticides, plastics/plasticisers, electronic wastes, flameretardants, metals, food additives, and personal care products. These EDCs can disturb hormonal balance and result in several health disorders, including developmental and reproductive abnormalities, increased prevalence of hormonesensitive cancers, neurodevelopmental delays and abnormal growth patterns in children, and alterations in immune function

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