Study: Range of Pharmaceuticals in Fish Across US
Fish caught near wastewater treatment plants serving five major U.S. cities had residues of pharmaceuticals in them, including medicines used to treat high cholesterol, allergies, high blood pressure, bipolar disorder and depression, researchers reported Wednesday.
Findings from this first nationwide study of human drugs in fish tissue have prompted the Environmental Protection Agency to significantly expand similar ongoing research to more than 150 different locations.
"The average person hopefully will see this type of a study and see the importance of us thinking about water that we use every day, where does it come from, where does it go to? We need to understand this is a limited resource and we need to learn a lot more about our impacts on it," said study co-author Bryan Brooks, a Baylor University researcher and professor who has published more than a dozen studies related to pharmaceuticals in the environment.
A person would have to eat hundreds of thousands of fish dinners to get even a single therapeutic dose, Brooks said. But researchers including Brooks have found that even extremely diluted concentrations of pharmaceutical residues can harm fish, frogs and other aquatic species because of their constant exposure to contaminated water.
Brooks and his colleague Kevin Chambliss tested fish caught in rivers where wastewater treatment plants release treated sewage in Chicago, Dallas, Phoenix, Philadelphia and Orlando, Fla. For comparison, they also tested fish from New Mexico's pristine Gila River Wilderness Area, an area isolated from human sources of pollution.
Earlier research has confirmed that fish absorb medicines because the rivers they live in are contaminated with traces of drugs that are not removed in sewage treatment plants. Much of the contamination comes from the unmetabolized residues of pharmaceuticals that people have taken and excreted; unused medications dumped down the drain also contribute to the problem.
The researchers, whose work was funded by a $150,000 EPA grant, tested fish for 24 different pharmaceuticals, as well as 12 chemicals found in personal care products.
They found trace concentrations of seven drugs and two soap scent chemicals in fish at all five of the urban river sites. The amounts varied, but some of the fish had combinations of many of the compounds in their livers.
The researchers didn't detect anything in the reference fish caught in rural New Mexico.
In an ongoing investigation, The Associated Press has reported trace concentrations of pharmaceuticals have been detected in drinking water provided to at least 46 million Americans.
The EPA has called for additional studies about the impact on humans of long-term consumption of minute amounts of medicines in their drinking water, especially in unknown combinations. Limited laboratory studies have shown that human cells failed to grow or took unusual shapes when exposed to combinations of some pharmaceuticals found in drinking water.
"This pilot study is one important way that EPA is increasing its scientific knowledge about the occurrence of pharmaceuticals and personal care products in the environment," said EPA spokeswoman Suzanne Rudzinski. She said the completed and expanded EPA sampling for pharmaceuticals and other compounds in fish and surface water is part of the agency's National Rivers and Stream Assessment.
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8 Comments so far
Show AllHappy little fish! They are calm and content as they take the bait and get ready to be eaten up, just like us.
Joe
We never used to get those ads up here in Canada that are so common in the US for drugs as direct to consumer advertising by drug companies is not allowed.
I am just baffled at those ads. They all show the typical "happy and active scene" yet in the disclaimers have a list of side effects that IMHO are worse then the sympton being treated.
Dont take if pregnant or nursing or if you plan on being pregnant or were once pregnant or if you got someone else pregnant or if you plan on getting someone pregnant or if you thought about or if you squint your eyes when looking into the sun.
And then there are all those ads from the lawyers saying to call them if you or someone you know has died or developed some horrible condition or disease after taking one of those medications because you might be entitled to some compensation.
I like the latest one - a new prescription medication for the constipation that many prescription drugs cause. My doctor told me he spends more time writing prescriptions for the side effects than he does for the drug itself.
Don't know about anyone else, but the ads have certainly turned me away from taking ANY prescription drugs. I'll suffer with the conditions I already have, thank you.
A very good point, and don't forget that those drugs were 'FDA approved'---
Let's go fishing.
Godd Luck America you eally need it.
everything, absolutely everything is connected. all life effects all life. this sadness of fish contamination with human made and prescribed pharmaceuticals should be quite obvious without all the studies. one more example of human disregard for the rest of life on this planet. we are NOT the center of the universe!
'Modern' perspective, especially in the corporate world of economics, regards Nature as inanimate. Disregarding the infinitely intricate interweaving of the electro-bio-chemical balances that literally breathe, drink, suffer and respond to respect for the balances is a traceable pattern of the current dominant powers and is disregarded with devastating effects on all of life. Nature is the epitomy of social/spiritual, if you really think about it.
Doctors should not get financial kickbacks from Pharmaceutical Corporations for giving out antidepressant prescriptions. It's all a con to overmedicate people and make them more compliant to the abuses of mindless working and consuming.
They are handing out samples like candy to everyone and half of it ends up down the drain when people have an adverse reaction. No wonder the fish are getting a little "medication" too. It is a Brave New World.
It's "better living through chemistry".