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From: Agriculture Forum
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] 

Los Angeles Times

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

HYPERLINK
"http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2007/03/28/MNG8LOT1SF1.
DTL"Fertility problems seen for sons of beef-eating women 

Sons born to women who ate a lot of beef during their pregnancy have a 25
percent below-normal sperm count and three times the normal risk of
fertility problems, researchers reported Tuesday. 

The problem may be due to anabolic steroids used in the United States to
fatten the cattle, Shanna Swan of the University of Rochester Medical Center
reported in the journal Human Reproduction. It could also be due to
pesticides and other environmental contaminants, she said. 

If the sperm deficit is related to the hormones in beef, Swan's findings may
be "just the tip of the iceberg," wrote biologist Frederick vom Saal of the
University of Missouri in an editorial accompanying the paper. 

In daughters of the beef-eaters, those same hormones could alter the
incidence of polycystic ovarian syndrome, the age of puberty and the
postnatal growth rate, he said. 

"It's a small effect, but it is a significant effect," said Dr. Ted
Schettler, an environmental health specialist at the Institute for Global
Communications in San Francisco. "It's not surprising. The more you look at
dietary factors, the more you turn up interesting information about how diet
during pregnancy affects lots of aspects of human health." 

Six growth-promoting hormones are routinely used in cattle production in the
United States and Canada: the natural steroids estradiol, testosterone and
progesterone, and the synthetic hormones zeranol, trenbolone acetate and
melengestrol acetate. At slaughter, not all of these hormones have been
metabolized. 

 





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