Friday, December 26, 2025
ADVT 
Health

Lead exposure can make you fat

Darpan News Desk IANS, 09 Aug, 2014 07:45 AM
    Lead exposure is linked to several neurological problems. Now add obesity to it.
     
    Even at low levels, lead is associated with obesity in mice whose mothers were exposed to the chemical, researchers at University of Michigan have found.
     
    Specifically, male mice exposed to lead had about 10 percent increase in weight.
     
    "The data support the obesogen hypothesis that toxicant exposures in the womb contribute to the higher rate of obesity," said Dana Dolinoy, an assistant professor of environmental health sciences at University of Michigan.
     
    There are certain chemicals that are considered the hallmarks of the obesity epidemic and lead has not been one of them till date.
     
    "Our study is the first to look at how what a mother ingests, even before pregnancy, impacts her offspring," Dolinoy noted.
     
    In the study, mothers were exposed to lead through drinking water two weeks before mating then throughout pregnancy and nursing.
     
    The researchers found that starting in early life, males in the two highest exposure groups outweighed the controls, a trend consistent from youth to adulthood.
     
    An increase in body fat at all dosages showed up in males at three months of age, researchers noted.
     
    Overall, both sexes exposed to the highest dose ate more than the control group, with males eating more at six months of age and female consumption increasing at nine months of age.
     
    Exposed males also showed impaired insulin levels at nine months of age.
     
    The paper was described in the journal PLOS ONE.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Do humans have spiders' genes?

    Do humans have spiders' genes?
    Not only the spiderman, even you may share certain genomic similarities with spiders, a study that for the first time sequenced the genome of a spider has revealed.

    Do humans have spiders' genes?

    Anger a better motivator for volunteers than sympathy?

    Anger a better motivator for volunteers than sympathy?
    Angry people do not always raise a ruckus; they may also bring about positive changes to society with a new study showing that anger may be more effective at motivating people to volunteer than other motives.

    Anger a better motivator for volunteers than sympathy?

    Impulsive people at greater risk of food addiction

    Impulsive people at greater risk of food addiction
    Impulsive people are at greater risks of food and drug addition as impulsivity is a result of cellular activities in the part of the brain involved with reward and not a result of dysfunctional eating behaviour, a study indicated.

    Impulsive people at greater risk of food addiction

    'Lung disease linked to diabetes under-diagnosed in India'

    'Lung disease linked to diabetes under-diagnosed in India'
    An infectious lung disease - melioidosis - which is linked to diabetics is grossly under-diagnosed in India, according to a British expert.

    'Lung disease linked to diabetes under-diagnosed in India'

    Keep it going! Yawn can cool your brain

    Keep it going! Yawn can cool your brain
    It may look unpleasant in office meeting or in the middle of a social dinner but yawning does help cool your brain.

    Keep it going! Yawn can cool your brain

    Revealed: How dinosaurs shrunk into birds

    Revealed: How dinosaurs shrunk into birds
    Dinosaurs are not extinct, go tell this to your kids. There are about 10,000 species alive today - in the form of birds!

    Revealed: How dinosaurs shrunk into birds