A study is the first to show an association between unusually high pesticide exposure and poor sense of smell among aging farmers.
The research examined more than 11,200 farmers over a 20-year period. At the start of the study, about 16 percent of participants reported having experienced a high pesticide exposure event, or HPEE, such as a large amount of pesticide spilling on their body. Two decades later, they were asked if they suffered olfactory impairment, a partial to complete loss of sense of smell.
Farmers who reported an HPEE were 50 percent more likely to report a poor sense of smell at the end of the study. The research also showed that an immediate washing with soap and water might mitigate risk. Compared to farmers who never experienced a high exposure event, those who did and washed within three hours, had about a 40 percent higher risk of having problems with smell. Those who waited four or more hours saw their risk potentially double.
The study, a collaboration with researchers from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences and National Cancer Institute, appears in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives.
“Studying farmers gives us more reliable data on pesticide exposures than if we had studied the general population,” says Honglei Chen, lead author and professor of epidemiology at Michigan State University. “Because they use pesticides more and it’s part of their job, they’re more likely to remember what pesticides they used and in cases of high exposures, report the specific events.”
In the study, Chen was able to identify two insecticides—DDT and lindane—as well as four weed killers—alachlor, metolachlor, 2,4-D, and pendimethalin—that showed a greater association with poor sense of smell.
“Farmers reporting incidents, involving unusually high exposures to certain organochlorine insecticides such as DDT and herbicides including 2,4-D, were more likely to have a poor sense of smell,” he says. “More research needs to be done, but some studies have linked these chemicals to Parkinson’s and possibly dementia, too.”
While poor sense of smell has been shown to be an early symptom of Parkinson’s and dementia, Chen says his study only addresses an association between pesticide exposure and impaired smell, not to neurodegenerative diseases.
“Olfactory impairment affects up to 25 percent of our older population, and our understanding of what the consequences are is still very limited,” Chen says. “Studies have also suggested that older adults with a poor sense of smell are more likely to die earlier, so understanding the factors involved is very important.”
Chen’s study took place as part of the national Agricultural Health Study with the National Institutes of Health, Environmental Protection Agency, and the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health.
Source: Michigan State University