They’re called endocrine disruptors — and they’re everywhere…
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Men: this hidden toxin at home lower’s T
One of the biggest overlooked health crises of our modern era are substances called endocrine disruptors
These are environmental and mostly man made. And they are everywhere.
Here’s what you need to know.
What is an endocrine disrupting compound?
An endocrine disrupting compound is an environmental factor that messes with your hormonal systems.
An endocrine-disrupting compound was defined by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) as “an exogenous agent that interferes with synthesis, secretion, transport, metabolism, binding action, or elimination of natural blood-borne hormones that are present in the body and are responsible for homeostasis, reproduction, and developmental process.”
They aren’t like poisons that kill you right away, instead they disrupt your health over a period of time.
It can take a long time for endocrine disruptors to show up.
One of the biggest challenges in dealing with endocrine disruptors is that they take a long time to show their effects.
As already mentioned, a critical concern is the potential lag between exposure to EDCs and the manifestation of a clinical disorder. In humans, this period may be years or decades. In the case of reproduction, infertility cannot be assessed until the exposed individual has attained a certain age, again resulting in a lag between early exposure and manifestation of a dysfunction. Delayed or early puberty cannot be assessed until this event actually takes place, although timing of puberty could involve programming many years earlier during fetal life.
That’s in part because unless the hormone system goes completely haywire in our bodies, the effects are subtle and creep up on us.
Endocrine disruptors are everywhere.
Another problem is that endocrine disruptors are everywhere.
Let’s take a look at a few of the environmental endocrine disruptors.
BPA is found in plastics and is a powerful xenoestrogen — meaning it acts similarly to estrogen in the body.
BPA is a synthetic monomer used in the production of polycarbonate plastics and epoxy resins and is one of the highest production synthetic compounds worldwide. Importantly, conjugated BPA was detected in the urine of 93% of the U.S. population in a recent screen conducted by the Center for Disease Control.
Currently, you’ll see a lot of products that are labeled BPA free, but most of them have replaced BPA with BPS, which is probably not particularly better.
BPA can have significant impacts on male health.
Additionally, mice in the BPA cohort demonstrated an earlier rise in prostate-specific antigen (biochemical failure), which indicates that BPA significantly shortened the time to therapeutic relapse. These outcomes underscore the need for further study of the effects of BPA on tumor progression and therapeutic efficacy.
Avoiding plastics — especially plastics that hold food and not microwaving food in plastic — can help.
PCBs are no longer being made in the United States, but can be present in items made before 1979.
PCBs are persistent organic pollutants that are fat-soluble and bioaccumulate in human body fat deposits. Many PCBs have estrogenic or antiandrogenic activity and as such, may perturb the prostate gland.
PCBs can lead to prostate cancer.
A recent analysis in Swedish men with and without prostate cancer of adipose tissue PCB concentrations revealed a significant association between PCB levels in the higher quadrants and prostate cancer odds ratio, with the most marked associations for PCB 153 and transchlordane
UV Filters
This one is nuts.
But recent reports have shown that UV light filters — the ones we use as coatings on glass — are estrogenic.
Recent reports have shown that UV light filters used to protect against the sun have estrogenic activity.
It’s even possible that these compounds can affect prostate development.
Although there are no studies on these UV filters and human prostate cancer, two reports indicate that early life exposure to these compounds can alter prostate gland development, growth, and gene expression in the rat prostate.
The biggest defense you have against estrogenic compounds that are endocrine disruptors is to take care of your overall health.
You should also take steps to make sure that you are producing enough testosterone and flushing the estrogen from your system.
You can avoid endocrine disruptors to a certain extent, but you can’t avoid them all.
So it’s important to know about endocrine disruptors and take action.
—-Important Message for Men Who Want to Protect Their Testosterone—-
These Booter Bites block endocrine disruptors and naturally boost T in men
I make a delicious little bite-size snack that protects my natural testosterone levels.
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And my estrogen is staying low.
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