New
Study Links Head Lice Treatments to Abnormal Behavior in Children
qThe
treatment of head lice might be worse than the actual lice. (Photo: Getty
Images)
A disturbing new study has
linked a common chemical found in head lice treatments to behavioral
difficulties in children.
The research, which was
published in the journal Occupational &
Environmental Medicine, found that children who had higher
levels of certain pyrethroids — which are synthetic chemicals used in
insecticides like head lice treatments and some mosquito repellents — in
their system were mqore likely to display abnormal behaviors at age 6 than
those who didn’t.
Pyrethroids work by
damaging the nerves of insects, killing them in the process, and scientists
wanted to see if they had a negative impact on children as well.
(Permethrin, an active ingredient in the most popular drugstore lice
treatments, is a pyrethroid.) For the study, the researchers measured levels of
five pyrethroid metabolites in the urine of women in the early stages of
pregnancy and, later, in their 6-year-olds to see if there was a link between
being exposed to the chemical in utero and childhood, and behavior that could
suggest neurodevelopmental damage.
Nearly 300 women filled out
a questionnaire about socioeconomic factors, lifestyle, their child’s behavior,
and various things their child had been exposed to. Psychologists visited the
families at home to do behavioral assessments of the children, and also took
urine and dust samples.
Behavior was rated using
the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire, a validated behavioral screening
test for children, with a focus on altruism (how social children are),
internalizing disorders (the inability to share problems and ask for help), and
externalizing disorders (being defiant and disruptive).
Three of the pyrethroid
metabolites showed up most often in the urine of mothers and their children:
trans-DCCA, cis-DBCA, and cis-DCCA.
Here’s what researchers
determined: Mothers with higher levels of cis-DCCA in their urine during
pregnancy were more likely to have children with a higher risk of internalizing
behaviors. Higher levels of another metabolite, 3-PBA, in the children’s urine
was linked with a higher risk of externalizing behaviors. Overall, children
with the highest levels of metabolites in their urine were three times more
likely to have abnormal behavior than those with lower levels. As a result, the
researchers concluded that pyrethroids might alter neurochemical signaling in
the brain.
The news is understandably
disturbing for parents who have treated their children with pyrethroids
for lice — and there are a lot of them. The Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention estimates that up to 12 million head
lice infestations happen each year among children aged 3 to 11. Lice are
parasites that live in human hair, eyelashes, and eyebrows and feed on the
blood of their host, and they’re not easy pests to get rid of. Hence, the
common use of chemical shampoos and treatments for lice infestations — many of
which contain pyrethroids.
Before you panic, know
this: The study found that there was a correlation between
pyrethroids and behavioral issues in children — not a causation. That means
they determined that children who have behavioral issues also have high levels
of certain pyrethroids in their system, but didn’t actually find that using
pyrethroids causes behavioral problems in children.
“The findings should be
considered preliminary and prompt more rigorous studies,”
Amesh A. Adalja, MD, a board-certified infectious disease physician
and affiliated scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health
Security, tells Yahoo Beauty.
Shahrouz Ganjian, MD, a
board certified pediatrician at Providence Saint John’s Health Center in Santa
Monica, Calif., tells Yahoo Beauty that he’s not shocked by the findings. “In
the past 15 years, there’s been a lot more research that has found pesticide
exposure is linked to ADHD in boys and pediatric cancer,” he says. The study
that found a link between ADHD and pesticides was published in the
journal Environmental
Health. It found a link between pyrethroid pesticide
exposure and ADHD, particularly in the areas of hyperactivity and impulsivity.
While girls were affected, the link was stronger in boys. However, this was
also a correlational study.
Pyrethroids are
among the most common treatments for lice, but other compounds can be
used, like alcohol-based treatments and an anti-parasitic drug called
ivermectin, Adalja says. However, pyrethroids are “the main recommended
treatments for lice,” he adds. Ganjian also recommends Sklice lice treatment,
which doesn’t contain pyrethroids and Licefreee, which he calls “more
natural.”
Pyrethroids also show up in
some mosquito repellents, but Adalja says they’re typically of the
type applied to clothes or boots, and not the ones that go on your skin.
Adalja stresses that
follow-up studies are needed to determine how much of a connection exists
between pyrethroid exposure and behavioral issues. “It’s an interesting
finding, but it’s not definite,” he says. “If people are very worried about
this, then there are other alternatives that are effective against lice besides
pyrethroids … it’s not like this is their only option.”
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