Tuesday,
March 18, 2014
Written By:
Sayer Ji
Founder,
GreenMedInfo.com
"The presence of
glyphosate residues in both humans and animals could haul the entire population
towards numerous health hazards, studying the impact of glyphosate residues on
health is warranted and the global regulations for the use of glyphosate may
have to be re-evaluated."
A newly released study published in Environmental
& Analytical Toxicology highlights
the chemical dangers associated with the GMO agricultural system, which relies
heavily on the herbicide known as glyphosate (aka Roundup), and to which widespread
exposure through the environment and our food is increasingly becoming
inevitable.
The study titled, "Detection of Glyphosate in Animals
and Humans," aimed to investigate glyphosate
residues in different biological samples from humans and animals, in order to
gain insight into the modern day exposure situation.
The following animal
samples were collected:
- Urine from cows kept in GM free areas.
- Organs from slaughtered cows from conventional husbandry (gut wall, liver, kidney, lung and muscles).
- Urine samples from Danish cows.
- Urine samples from hares and fattening rabbits.
The following human
samples were collected:
- Urine samples from humans with conventional or organic diets.
- Urine samples from healthy and chronically diseases humans.
All samples were tested,
revealing the following positive results:
- Animal Samples: "Glyphosate excretion in German dairy cows was significantly higher than Danish cows (Figure 1A). Surprisingly, cows kept in GM free region had significantly lower glyphosate concentrations in their urine compared with cows under convention husbandry (Figure 1B). Also glyphosate was detected in different organs of slaughtered cows including intestine, liver, muscles, spleen and kidney (Figure 1C). There were no significant differences of glyphosate residues in these organs. Hares showed significantly lower glyphosate residues in urine than fattening rabbit (Figure 2)."
- Human Samples: "Glyphosate was significantly higher in humans feed conventional feed compared with predominantly organic feed humans (Figure 3). Also the glyphosate residues in urine were grouped according to the human health status. Chronically ill humans had significantly higher glyphosate residues in urine than healthy humans (Figure 2)."
In the discussion portion
of the study, the researchers address several key points.
First, glyphosate
exposure is inevitable, due to the way it is used in food production.
Second, very little testing of glyphosate's presumed safety has
been performed, despite its global dominance as a preferred herbicide – this
despite a growing body of research indicating glyphosate's adverse effects on human health.
Thirdly, they pointed out
that beyond detecting glyphosate in intestine, liver, muscle, spleen and kidney
tissue of the exposed animal, other research found the chemical accumulates in
the bones – which they remarked was not a surprising finding, considering that
glyphosate is a strong chelating agent for calcium.
Finally, they discovered a
glyphosate concentration of 1 part per billion in people consuming
predominantly an organic food diet – significantly lower than found in those
consuming a conventional diet. They also point out that the presence of
low levels of glyphosate even within those fed organic food could be attributed
to contamination of the air and rain – an issue which we addressed recently in
our article, Roundup Weedkiller Found in 75% of Air and Rain Samples,
Gov. Study Finds.
The study concluded:
With countries like Sri Lanka and El Salvador moving to ban glyphosate formulations
(Roundup) due to its now suspected link to deadly kidney disease in
humans, studies like this remind us just how omnipresent the chemical is, and
how we can no longer pretend like the issue does not affect us. As long as we
continue to support an agricultural system and food industry that relies on a
chemical warfare model of non-sustainable production, where every plant or
insect must die but the chosen, patented GM one that can withstand the
agrichemical onslaught, we will be faced with the consequences: widespread
poisoning, and the eventual collapse of the fertility of the soil and
the biodiversity of the plants we need to survive.
No comments:
Post a Comment