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Parkinson's partially linked to pesticides 
2:11 PM, April 18, 2009 
UCLA researchers have provided strong new evidence linking at least some cases 
of Parkinson's disease to exposure to pesticides.  Researchers have suspected 
for some time that pesticides may cause the neurodegenerative disorder, and 
experiments in animals have shown that the chemicals, particularly the 
fungicide maneb and the herbicide paraquat, can cause Parkinson-like symptoms 
in animals. But proving it in humans has been difficult because of problems in 
assessing exposure to the agents.
Parkinson's is a disorder of the central nervous system that often impairs the 
sufferer's motor skills, speech and other functions. It is not fatal of 
itself, but complications often are. The disease has been recognized since the 
Middle Ages but became more prevalent in the 20th century. As many as 180 of 
every 100,000 Americans develop it.
To explore a potential connection to pesticides, epidemiologist Beate Ritz of 
UCLA and her graduate student Sadie Costello, now at UC Berkeley, studied 
public records of pesticide applications in California's Central Valley from 
1974 to 1999. Every application of pesticides to crops must be registered with 
the state. Working with Myles Cockburn of USC, they developed a tool to 
estimate pesticide exposure in areas immediately adjacent to the fields.
They then identified 368 longtime residents who lived within 500 yards of 
fields where the chemicals had been sprayed and compared them to 341 carefully 
matched controls who did not live near the fields.
They reported in the current issue of the American Journal of Epidemiology 
that people who lived next to fields where maneb or paraquat had been sprayed 
were, on average, about 75% more likely to develop the disease. But those who 
developed the early-onset form of the disease -- contracting it before the age 
of 60 -- had double the risk of contracting it if they were exposed to either 
maneb or paraquat alone and four times the risk if they were exposed to both. 
In most cases, the exposure occurred years before the onset of the disease. 
Exposure to other pesticides did not appreciably alter the risk.
"The results confirmed two previous observations from animal studies," Ritz 
said. "One, that exposure to multiple chemicals may increase the effect of 
each chemical. That's important, since humans are often exposed to more than 
one pesticide in the environment. And second, that the timing of the exposure 
is also important."

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