Pesticides can increase the incidence of prostate cancer

In a recent study, 22 pesticides were linked to an increase in the incidence of prostate cancer in the United States, and four of them were also linked to an increase in the death rate due to the disease. The study, published in the journal “Cancer”, highlights the importance of studying the effects of exposure to the environment, especially with regard to the use of pesticides, to understand the contrast of infection and deaths of prostate cancer between the various geographical regions of the United States. Among the 22 pesticides showing an increase in the incidence of prostate cancer, three of which have been previously identified that they can contribute to the development of the disease. Cancer pesticides and the most prominent of these pesticides are pesticides 2.4D, which is one of the most commonly used pesticides in the United States, while the 19 other pesticides, not previously linked to prostate cancer, include 10 curly pesticides, various fungicides and insecticides, in addition to a congenital pesticide. The study showed that there are pesticides associated with an increase in the death rate among people with prostate cancer, which are treflraline, chlonsolam-methayl and divlofenzopier, all pesticides, as well as one pesticide, which is the Thiamithoxam. The US Environmental Protection Agency is only classified as a substance that is likely to be carcinogenic for humans, but these four pesticides have shown a clear connection to the high mortality rate associated with prostate cancer in areas where agricultural customs abound, abounding the need for a strict organizational overview of these chemicals to improve the community and reduce. Prostate cancer, dr. Simon John Christophe Sornsen, the lead author of the study and professor of medicine at Stanford University, indicates that the study shows the role of exposure to environments in the environment in the explanation of some geographical differences in the rate of infection and deaths of prostate cancer in the United States. “Based on these results, we can improve, improve and work our efforts to determine the risk factors for prostate cancer to reduce the number of people with this disease,” he says. The study confirms that pesticides may be one of the environmental factors that contribute to the high infection and death with prostate cancer. But the need is still underway to conduct broader and more comprehensive studies to understand the exact mechanism that leads to the effects of these pesticides. The results of this study can help develop strict organizational policies on the use of pesticides that can be harmful to public health, and to direct farmers and concerned authorities to safe agricultural methods; To reduce negative health effects.