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Prozac Interferes With Reproduction
More and more studies are turning up evidence of common drugs and their breakdown products in the nation's waterways (see NIST Tech Beat, www.nist.gov/public_affairs/techbeat/tb2005_1222.htm#drugs, raising concerns about potential health impacts for both humans and animals from low-level but continuous exposure to the chemicals. NIST and NCSU researchers at the Hollings Marine Laboratory (Charleston, S.C.) examined the effect of fluoxetine, a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) on a native freshwater mussel (Elliptio complanata). Fluoxetine, sold under the trade name Prozac At laboratory test concentrations, they found, fluoxetine caused female mussels carrying larvae to release them prematurely, and often, before they were viable, disrupting their reproductive cycle. Approximately 70 percent of the almost 300 species of North American freshwater mussels are considered vulnerable to extinction or already extinct. The finding also raises questions about the effect of fluoxetine on other aquatic species that share similar endocrine mechanisms. The research team currently is gathering environmental samples from local waters and sediments to compare environmental concentrations with their findings. Posted by: Julia Source |
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