By Drew Armstrong - 2012-06-06T21:00:00Z
Fish exposed to psychiatric medicines in water showed gene patterns similar to those found in people with autism, in a study suggesting a link between drugs that get into the human drinking supply and the disease.
Researchers put antidepressants Prozac and Effexor, as well as antiseizure drug Tegratol into water tanks of minnows. Tests showed that the same genes turned on in people with autism were also triggered in the fish after exposure, according to a study published today in the journal PLoS ONE.
The findings suggest that small amounts of psychiatric medications found in the drinking supply may be a cause of autism, the researchers said. Psychiatric drugs have been linked to autism-like symptoms in studies of rats exposed to the medicines, according to the study.
An environmental cause is really not on the radar for a lot of people, said study author Michael Thomas, a professor of evolutionary biology at Idaho State University in Pocatello, in a telephone interview. My sincere hope is that this opens the door to a new question and allows people to look into that possibility.
Concentrations of the drugs are found downstream from water treatment plants that process human waste that contains the medicines, Thomas said. The molecules make their way into the supply downstream, where pregnant mothers who drink the water can pass the exposure to their fetuses.
While others have envisioned a causal role for psychotropic drugs in idiopathic autism, we were astonished to find evidence that this might occur at very low dosages, such as those found in aquatic systems, Thomas said in a statement accompanying the study.
Eli Lilly & Co.s Prozac, Pfizer Inc.s Effexor and their generic equivalents belong to classes of drugs that generated $14.2 billion in U.S. sales last year, according to data compiled by Wolters Kluwer NV and Bloomberg.
The researchers used concentrations of the drugs higher than are measured in the field, which Thomas said was intentional.
Every study that comes out that measures concentrations in the environment shows orders of magnitude higher than the previous study, so we figured the concentrations would catch up with us, Thomas said.
Read this article:
Prozac-Contaminated Drinking Water May Be Link to Autism