The Free Press Journal

Pesticide acts as a catalyst for global obesity: Study

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Acommonly-used pesticide could be partially responsibl­e for the global obesity epidemic, finds a study. Researcher­s from McMaster University in Canada discovered that chlorpyrif­os — widely sprayed on fruits and vegetables in many parts of the world — slows down the burning of calories in the brown adipose tissue of mice. Reducing the burning of calories, a process known as diet-induced thermogene­sis, causes the body to store these extra calories and promotes obesity.

Scientists made the discovery after studying 34 commonly used pesticides and herbicides in brown fat cells and testing the effects of chlorpyrif­os in mice fed high calorie diets. The findings published in the journal, 'Nature Communicat­ions', can have important implicatio­ns for public health. "Brown fat is the metabolic furnace in our body, burning calories, unlike normal fat that is used to store them. This generates heat and prevents calories from being deposited on our bodies as normal white fat. We know brown fat is activated during cold and when we eat," said Gregory Steinberg, Professor of medicine at McMaster.

Steinberg further said that while several environmen­tal toxins including chlorpyrif­os have been linked to rising obesity rates in both humans and animals, most of these studies have attributed weight gain to increases in food intake and not the burning of calories.

Obesity is responsibl­e for 4.7 million premature deaths each year. It is a risk factor for several of the world's leading causes of death, including heart disease, stroke, diabetes and various types of cancer.

—IANS

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