A glass of milk can contain a cocktail of up to 20 painkillers, antibiotics and growth hormones, scientists have shown.
Using
a highly sensitive test, they found a host of chemicals used to treat
illnesses in animals and people in samples of cow, goat and human breast
milk.
The doses of
drugs were far too small to have an effect on anyone drinking them, but
the results highlight how man-made chemicals are now found throughout
the food chain.
the highest quantities of medicines were
found in cow’s milk.
Researchers believe some of the drugs and growth
promoters were given to the cattle, or got into milk through cattle feed
or contamination on the farm.
The Spanish-Moroccan team analysed 20
samples of cow’s milk bought in Spain and Morocco, along with samples of
goat and breast milk.
Their
breakdown, published in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry,
revealed that cow’s milk contained traces of anti-inflammatory drugs
niflumic acid, mefenamic acid and ketoprofen – commonly used as
painkillers in animals and people.
It also contained the hormone 17-beta-estradiol, a form of the sex hormone oestrogen.
The hormone was detected at three millionths of a gram in every
kilogram of milk, while the highest dose of niflumic acid was less than
one millionth of a gram per kilogram of milk.
However,
the scientists, led by Dr Evaristo Ballesteros, from the University of
Jaen in Spain, say their technique could be used to check the safety of
other types of food.
Dr Ballesteros said: ‘We believe the
new methodology will help to provide a more effective way of determining
the presence of these kinds of contaminants in milk or other products.
‘Food
quality control laboratories could use this new tool to detect these
drugs before they enter the food chain. This would raise consumers’
awareness and give them the knowledge that food is… harmless, pure,
genuine, beneficial to health and free of toxic residues,’ he added.
Net result: Compounds manufactured and used by humans are showing up in all parts of the food chain
The tests also found niflumic acid
in goat’s milk, while breast milk contained traces of painkillers
ibuprofen and naproxen, along with the antibiotic triclosan and some
hormones.
The
researchers say their new 30-minute test is the most sensitive of its
kind. If the findings are true for Spanish and Moroccan milk, they could
equally be true for milk produced in Britain and northern Europe.
Last year Portsmouth University scientists found that fish were being contaminated with the anti-depressant Prozac.
The drug enters rivers from the sewer system and tinkers with the brain chemistry of fish, the researchers claimed.
Previous studies have shown that caffeine is released into our waterways after surviving the sewage treatment process.
The hormones from the contraceptive pill and HRT have been blamed for feminising fish, leading to male fish producing eggs.
The
effects of antibiotics, blood pressure drugs and cholesterol-lowering
drugs on wildlife are also being studied around the world. DailyMail
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