Recent US research says that people who drink from bottles made of polycarbonate plastic have a considerably higher level of the chemical bisphenol A (BPA) in their bodies compared to when they do not. Polycarbonate plastic is the one used to make hard-plastic drinking bottles and baby bottles. The study was carried out by senior investigator Karin B Michels, associate professor of epidemiology at Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) along with the help of colleagues. The research was published online in the May 12 issue of Environmental Health Perspectives. The finding confirms polycarbonate plastic bottles are a vital source of the BPA that finds its way into the human body. In animals, BPA interferes with reproductive development. It has also been associated with cardiovascular disease and diabetes in humans, among other things. A two-third increase of in the level of BPA in the urine was noticed in participants who drank from polycarbonate bottles for a week says Michael and his colleagues. Michael says: “We found that drinking cold liquids from polycarbonate bottles for

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Polycarbonate Plastic increases BPA levels


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