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Oils may cause breast growth in
boys
Boston -
Lavender and tea tree oils found in some shampoos, soaps and lotions
can temporarily leave boys with enlarged breasts in rare cases,
apparently by disrupting their hormonal balance, a preliminary study
suggests.
While advising parents to consider
the possible risk, several hormone experts emphasized that the
problem appears to happen infrequently and clears up when the oils
are no longer used. None of those interviewed called for a ban on
sales.
The study reported on the
condition, gynecomastia, in three boys ages 4, 7 and 10. They all
went back to normal when they stopped using skin lotions, hair gel,
shampoo or soap with the natural oils.
It's unclear how often this problem
might crop up in other young children.
These plant oils, sometimes called
"essential oils," are added to many health-care products, usually
for their scent. The oils are sometimes found in other household
products or sold in purer forms. Tea tree oil is sometimes used in
shampoos for head lice.
The suspected effect in this study
is blamed on some chemical within the oils that the body processes
like estrogen, the female hormone that promotes breast growth.
The findings were being reported
Thursday in the New England Journal of Medicine. The federally
funded study came out of the University of Colorado and the
environmental health branch of the National Institutes of Health.
The findings were first released last year at a science meeting.
The three boys were brought to
their doctors with overdeveloped breasts that looked like those of
girls in early puberty. They were sore in one case. For each boy,
doctors could tie the problem only to their use over several months
of the natural-oil products.
The researchers suspected that the
oils might be upsetting the boys' hormonal balance. So they did a
series of laboratory tests to check how these oils work within human
cells. The oils appeared to mimic estrogen and block the male
hormone androgen.
On product labels, the oils
sometimes are listed by their scientific names: Lavandula
angustifolia (lavender oil) and Melaleuca alternifolia (tea tree
oil). Such products do not require government approval to be sold
unless they make specific health claims.
Marijuana and soy products also
have been linked to gynecomastia.
Dr. Clifford Bloch, a hormone
specialist in Greenwood Village, Colo., who treated the three boys,
recommended that parents "be cautious" with such products,
especially for prolonged use. "I would not give these products to my
children," he said in an interview.
Bloch said he also suspects the oil
played a role in a handful of young girls he saw for a similar
condition, including a 17-month-old whose parents were washing her
bottles with a lavender-scented soap.
Others sounded less worried. "It
takes very little estrogen to cause gynecomastia in a young child,"
said Dr. Richard Auchus, a University of Texas Southwestern Medical
Center hormone expert who knew of the study findings. "If they're
getting it for a brief period of time, that really shouldn't cause
long-term problems."
Also, the research did not pinpoint
any specific estrogen-like compounds in the oils or look for them in
a range of products. Chemist Steven Dentali, at the industry group
American Herbal Products Association, said that warning people to
avoid such oils "is premature without the additional basic research
needed to bolster the case that the issue here is both real and
significant."
Gynecomastia
is very common in boys during the hormonal changes of puberty. But
it also occurs as a rare condition in younger boys, men, and girls
before puberty.
Bloch, the study doctor, said it's
unknown if such oils could hurt women with estrogen-fed breast
tumors.-- Associated
Press
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