Trichloroethylene (TCE) tied to Parkinsons - Cure Parkinson's

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Trichloroethylene (TCE) tied to Parkinsons

pmmargo profile image
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Asked about the future of Parkinson’s disease in the US, Dr Ray Dorsey says, “We’re on the tip of a very, very large iceberg.”

Dorsey, a neurologist at the University of Rochester Medical Center and author of Ending Parkinson’s Disease, believes a Parkinson’s epidemic is on the horizon. Parkinson’s is already the fastest-growing neurological disorder in the world; in the US, the number of people with Parkinson’s has increased 35% the last 10 years, says Dorsey, and “We think over the next 25 years it will double again.”

Most cases of Parkinson’s disease are considered idiopathic – they lack a clear cause. Yet researchers increasingly believe that one factor is environmental exposure to trichloroethylene (TCE), a chemical compound used in industrial degreasing, dry-cleaning and household products such as some shoe polishes and carpet cleaners.

To date, the clearest evidence around the risk of TCE to human health is derived from workers who are exposed to the chemical in the work-place. A 2008 peer-reviewed study in the Annals of Neurology, for example, found that TCE is “a risk factor for parkinsonism.” And a 2011 study echoed those results, finding “a six-fold increase in the risk of developing Parkinson’s in individuals exposed in the workplace to trichloroethylene (TCE).”

Dr Samuel Goldman of The Parkinson’s Institute in Sunnyvale, California, who co-led the study, which appeared in the Annals of Neurology journal, wrote: “Our study confirms that common environmental contaminants may increase the risk of developing Parkinson’s, which has considerable public health implications.” It was off the back of studies like these that the US Department of Labor issued a guidance on TCE, saying: “The Board recommends [...] exposures to carbon disulfide (CS2) and trichloroethylene (TCE) be presumed to cause, contribute, or aggravate Parkinsonism.”

TCE is a carcinogen linked to renal cell carcinoma, cancers of the cervix, liver, biliary passages, lymphatic system and male breast tissue, and fetal cardiac defects, among other effects. Its known relationship to Parkinson’s may often be overlooked due to the fact that exposure to TCE can predate the disease’s onset by decades. While some people exposed may sicken quickly, others may unknowingly work or live on contaminated sites for most of their lives before developing symptoms of Parkinson’s.

Those near National Priorities List Superfund sites (sites known to be contaminated with hazardous substances such as TCE) are at especially high risk of exposure. Santa Clara county, California, for example, is home not only to Silicon Valley, but 23 superfund sites – the highest concentration in the country. Google Quad Campus sits atop one such site; for several months in 2012 and 2013, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) found employees of the company were inhaling unsafe levels of TCE in the form of toxic vapor rising up from the ground beneath their offices.

While some countries heavily regulate TCE (its use is banned in the EU without special authorization) the EPA estimates that 250m lb of the chemical are still used annually in the US, and that in 2017, more than 2m lb of it was released into the environment from industrial sites, contaminating air, soil and water. TCE is currently estimated to be present in about 30% of US groundwater (the non-profit Environmental Working Group created its own map of TCE-contaminated water sites nationwide), though researcher Briana de Miranda, a toxicologist who studies TCE at the University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Medicine, says: “We are under-sampling how many people are exposed to TCE. It’s probably a lot more than we guess.”

Under EPA regulations, it’s considered “safe” for TCE to be present in drinking water at a maximum concentration of five parts per billion. In severe cases of contamination, such as that which occurred at Camp Lejeune, a North Carolina marine corps, between the 1950s and late 1980s, people are believed to have been exposed to up to 3,400 times the level of contaminants permitted by safety standards. A memorial site known as “Babyland” honors the children of military personnel who died after they or their pregnant mothers were exposed to TCE-tainted water while living on the base.

While De Miranda says researchers do not believe low concentrations of TCE in drinking water specifically are enough to cause illness, Dorsey doesn’t think it’s an overstatement to say US groundwater could be giving people Parkinson’s disease. “Numerous studies have linked well water to Parkinson’s disease, and it’s not just TCE in those cases, it can be pesticides like paraquat, too,” he says, referencing a lethal weedkiller the US still uses despite it being phased out in the EU, Brazil and China.

Using activated carbon filtration devices (like Brita filters) can help reduce TCE in drinking water, yet bathing in contaminated water, as well as inhaling vapours from toxic groundwater and soil, can be far more difficult to avoid.

De Miranda says policy and effective government intervention are crucial when it comes to testing, monitoring and remediating TCE contaminated sites, and that it’s important to raise awareness of TCE’s role in surging rates of Parkinson’s. Failure to address the issue will not only continue to negatively affect people’s health, but will exacerbate the adult home care crisis that has already left 50 million Americans responsible for providing care to sick loved ones, as Parkinson’s is characterized by slow, progressive degeneration and has no cure.

In May 2020, Minnesota became the first state to ban TCE; New York followed suit last December, as should more states, especially as federal action on the issue has lagged. Given that the negative health effects of TCE have been documented in the Journal of the American Medical Association since 1932, it’s well past time for the US to stop using it, and to better protect its civilians from hazardous chemicals that put lives at risk.

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parkylot profile image
parkylot

TCE must be the culprit that contributed to my PD. I worked as a cutter in a garment factory in NYC in the 70’s. TCE was used to remove fabric stains.

pmmargo profile image
pmmargo in reply toparkylot

Thanks for sharing that. My boss pointed out the article to me. Hope knowing the cause helps find a cure for you. Best Wishes, Paul

Bitsy profile image
Bitsy

The chemicals industry has a lot to answer for including those chemicals used in farming such as paraquat and by the pharmaceutical industry some of which are known to cause basal ganglia disease and Parkinson's. Nonetheless there is barely a murmur in the government, pharmaceutical or medical professions. Just like oil and gas industry and the tobacco industry there is culpable deniability.

KenS51 profile image
KenS51 in reply toBitsy

DuPont/Teflon...gasoline/lead...paint/lead ...silver amalgam teeth/mercury... Corvair/gas tanks...cigarettes/cancer...etc.Yeah, I really trust businesses and industries to do what is right and good...for their bottom line!

Unfortunately, those are just some of the ones we know about...there are apparently thousands of others in use today that have NOT been studied.

Not that I’m paranoid or anything!

KenS51 profile image
KenS51

Any follow-up done on the Armed Forces personnel and their families exposed to TCE to determine if Parkinsons showed up with greater than expected frequency as part of a longitudinal study? I would assume (ass-u-me?) that Armed Forces families would be relatively easy to track.

AmyLindy profile image
AmyLindy in reply toKenS51

We are tracked through the VA to some extent and for those related to presumptive TCE Contamination leading to PD at Camp Lejeune, the ATDSR (Toxic Disease Registry) serves as a tracker.

Phusson profile image
Phusson

I worked for a trucking company back in the early 80"s and I was sent to a superfund where my truck was loaded with contaminated soil and dumped at another location in Nashua NH.Your article makes sense.

pmmargo profile image
pmmargo

I'm sorry sorry to hear you got exposed in this way. I hope this somehow helps the Movement Specialist find the best therapy or drugs for you.

Art_lover45 profile image
Art_lover45

After secretarial college I went into the National Coal Board as a secretary (good job at the time) and happily conducted any activity required of me. We used to print copies of various newsletters regularly on a machine called a gestetner and the original was typed onto a sheet of non porous print medium and the whole was smeared with liquid print ink. So far so messy. Cleaning the damn thing was a messy job. My job! The TCE was kept under my desk in a huge bottle. I was required to soak a cloth in the fluid and clean the gestetner roller with this stuff. My boss warned me to be careful not to sniff the stuff in as I would get a headache and I was careful not to do so. About 4 - 5 years ago I was diagnosed with PD. I have often wondered if the TCE was to blame as it was dry cleaning fluid.

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