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AOL News, Andrew Schneider Published March 24, 2010
For almost two years, molecular biologist Bénédicte Trouiller doused the
drinking water of scores of lab mice with nano-titanium dioxide, the
most common nanomaterial used in consumer products today. She knew that
earlier studies conducted in test tubes and petri dishes had shown the
same particle could cause disease. But her tests at a lab at UCLA's
School of Public Health were in vivo -- conducted in living organisms --
and thus regarded by some scientists as more relevant in assessing
potential human harm.
Halfway through, Trouiller became alarmed:
Consuming the nano-titanium dioxide was damaging or destroying the
animals' DNA and chromosomes. The biological havoc continued as she
repeated the studies again and again. It was a significant finding: The
degrees of DNA damage and genetic instability that the 32-year-old
investigator documented can be "linked to all the big killers of man,
namely cancer, heart disease, neurological disease and aging," says
Professor Robert Schiestl, a genetic toxicologist who ran the lab at
UCLA's School of Public Health where Trouiller did her research.
Nano-titanium dioxide is so pervasive that the Environmental Working
Group says it has calculated that close to 10,000 over-the-counter
products use it in one form or another.
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