Air pollution, autism further linked by new study

GlobalPost

Air pollution’s link to autism was reinforced in new research released this week by University of Chicago, who analyzed 100 million American medical records on a county-by-county basis.

The researchers pinned their finding on boys with genital abnormalities, which can be caused by pollutants in the womb.

In turn, boys with autism are six times more likely to have those abnormalities.

“Autism appears to be strongly correlated with the rate of congenital malformations of the genitals in males across the country,” study author Andrey Rzhetsky said. “This gives an indicator of environmental load and the effect is surprisingly strong.”

The abnormalities – such as undescended testicles or a micropenis – are indications of possible congenital exposure to harmful environmental factors such as pesticides.

Autism rates jumped by 283 percent for every one-percent increase in frequency of malformations in a county, the study discovered.

Intellectual disability rates also increased 94 percent. Slight increases in autism and intellectual disability rates are also seen in wealthier and more urban counties.

More from GlobalPost: Autism and air pollution mean poorer countries at greater risk

The research appears in the March 13 issue of PLoS Computational Biology.

What hasn’t been discovered are any exact toxins that might be causing autism.

Leading experts believe autism spectrum disorders can be caused by both genetic and environmental factors.

“This study was not designed to figure out what the [environmental] factors are,” Autism Speaks senior director Alycia Halladay told HealthDay.

Halladay, who was not involved in the Chicago research, said there is no “smoking gun” when it comes to toxins, but “scientific agreement that it’s a mix of genes and environment.”

The next step, Rzhetsky and his team said, is including data from the Environmental Protection Agency.

“We interpret the results of this study as a strong environmental signal,” Rzhetsky said. “For future genetic studies we may have to take into account where data were collected, because it’s possible that you can get two identical kids in two different counties and one would have autism and the other would not.”

More from GlobalPost: Signs of autism can be detected in babies, new study says 

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