All posts tagged: PFOA

‘Forever chemicals’ in newborn blood linked to childhood leukemia

‘Forever chemicals’ in newborn blood linked to childhood leukemia

A few drops of blood taken within days of birth are now adding to one of the most troubling questions in environmental health: what happens when exposure to “forever chemicals” begins before a child even leaves the hospital? Researchers at the University of California, Irvine found that newborns with higher levels of certain PFAS compounds in dried blood spots had higher odds of later developing acute lymphoblastic leukemia, or ALL, the most common childhood cancer. The link was strongest for two of the best-known PFAS chemicals, PFOA and PFOS, and it appeared to grow when both were elevated together. The work, published in the Journal of Exposure Science & Environmental Epidemiology, does not prove that PFAS cause leukemia. Still, it pushes the evidence a step closer to the earliest window of life by measuring chemicals present at birth rather than estimating exposure from drinking water or other outside sources. PFAS, short for per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, have been used since the 1950s in products built to resist heat, grease, stains, and water. They have turned …

Algae-based nanotechnology breakthrough tackles PFOA pollution

Algae-based nanotechnology breakthrough tackles PFOA pollution

PFOA pollution has become one of the most pressing and intractable challenges in global water safety, with the toxic “forever chemical” now detected in drinking water supplies, groundwater, and ecosystems far from its sources. Now, researchers from Shenyang Agricultural University have unveiled a promising new weapon in the fight against PFOA pollution, using an unexpected ally from the ocean: marine algae. The newly developed material, made from algae-derived biochar and enhanced with nanotechnology, has shown an exceptional ability to capture and break down one of the most stubborn toxic chemicals found in water worldwide. A persistent pollutant with global reach Perfluorooctanoic acid, better known as PFOA, belongs to the broader PFAS family of forever chemicals. These compounds earned their nickname because of their extreme chemical stability, driven by strong carbon–fluorine bonds that resist heat, sunlight, and most conventional treatment methods. As a result, PFOA pollution has spread far beyond industrial sites, turning up in drinking water, groundwater, sediments, and even remote ecosystems. The health implications are serious. PFOA exposure has been linked to cancer, immune …