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Well another interesting study. A growing number of scientists suspect that electric light migh increase cancer risk. There is evidence that night lighting can help cause cancer by
interfering with the molecular mechanisms that control cell death and
multiplication.
Some experts claim there is a connection between lighting at night and an increase in the incidence of
childhood leukemia.
Light at night might be a cancer risk could electric light pose a
cancer threat? It might seem like the wildest of paranoid beliefs, but
a growing number of scientists suspect it might be true.
The
reason: Turning on the lights after dark may affect a small number of
"clock genes" that play a major role in controlling how cells live, die
and function, these researchers suggest. Specifically, the experts say,
there is evidence that night lighting can help cause cancer by
interfering with the molecular mechanisms that control cell death and
multiplication. A number of these researchers are in London this week
for a five-day meeting where they are considering the evidence for a
link between lighting at night and an increase in the incidence of
childhood leukemia.
The meeting, which concludes Friday, is
sponsored by Children With Leukaemia, Great Britain's leading charity
devoted to conquest of the disease. There has been a steady increase in
childhood leukemia rates in Britain and Europe, according to a report
delivered at the meeting by Michael P. Coleman and Anjal Shah,
epidemiologists at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
In the United States, a study by epidemiologists at the University of
Minnesota found a similar increase of about 1 percent every two years
between 1973 and 1998 -- but only for childhood leukemia.
The
incidence of adult leukemia declined during those years. And leukemia
may not be the only cancer affected by artificial lighting at night,
said Richard G. Stevens, an associate professor of medicine at the
University of Connecticut Health Center, who has been studying the role
of clock gene malfunction in breast cancer. The results of his research
are only preliminary, he noted, because the field is so young. "The
clock gene revolution is new," Stevens said. "They were only identified
about five years ago. There are eight or nine of them in mammals, and
they control a lot of other genes." Some of those genes control
apoptosis, the process by which the body destroys abnormal cells, among
other functions. Other genes control cell division. Malfunctions of
those genes can lead to cancer, as cells no longer pay attention to
signals telling them not to divide or abnormal cells fail to commit
suicide, Stevens said.
A possible link between electric light
and cancer could be the hormone melatonin, which protects genetic
material from mutation, according to Russell Reiter, professor of
cellular and structural biology at the University of Texas. Night light
suppresses the body's production of melatonin and thus can increase the
risk of cancer-related mutations, he told the London meeting. Scott
Davis chairman of the department of epidemiology at the University of
Washington, said that while the link between light at night and cancer
"may seem like a stretch on the surface, there is an underlying
biological basis for it." Davis, like Stevens, has been studying how
night lighting affects the production of female hormones, which, in
turn, can affect the risk of breast cancer. "We have found a
relationship between light at night and night-shift work to breast
cancer risk," Davis said. "The studies indicate that night work
disrupts the activity of melatonin, which leads to excessive production
of hormones in women." If the link between night light and cancer is
eventually proved to be true, Stevens said, it's hard to say what could
be done about it. "So far, no therapeutic agent has been developed for
it," he said.
Source: http://www.myhealthinsight.com/2007/03/12/Electric-Light-may-pose-Cancer-Risk.html
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