Dicofol is a non-systemic acaricide/miticide currently registered in the US and Canada for use on a wide variety of crops. This agrochemical has been identified as a potential candidate substance for the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UN-ECE) Persistent Organic Pollutant (POP) Protocol and implicated as a potential "endocrine disrupting compound". The technical product is usually synthesized from technical DDT and consists of approximately 80% and 20% of p,p'- and o,p'-dicofol isomers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe distribution of female hormones, 17beta-estradiol and estrone, was determined in effluents of 18 selected municipal treatment plants across Canada. Replicate 24-h composite samples were collected from the influent and final effluent of each treatment plant, and the removal efficiency compared to the operational characteristics of the plants. In conventional activated sludge and lagoon treatment systems, the mean concentrations of 17beta-estradiol and estrone in influent were 15.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFToxicol Lett
December 2001
There is a growing concern that environmental xenobiotics may be affecting human and wildlife health by disrupting normal endocrine function via interaction with steroid hormone receptors. Several of these persistent contaminants are chiral and may have enantiomer-specific biological properties. Previous experiments have demonstrated that (-)-o,p'-DDT enantiomer is a more active estrogen-mimic than the (+)-enantiomer in rats.
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