Agent Orange and the Vietnamese: the persistence of elevated dioxin levels in human tissues.
A Schecter,
L C Dai,
L T Thuy,
H T Quynh,
D Q Minh,
H D Cau,
P H Phiet,
N T Nguyen,
J D Constable and
R Baughman
Department of Preventive Medicine, State University of New York Health Science Center-Syracuse, Binghamton 13902, USA.
OBJECTIVES. The largest known dioxin contamination occurredbetween 1962 and 1970, when 12 million gallons of Agent Orange,a defoliant mixture contaminated with a form of the most toxicdioxin, were sprayed over southern and central Vietnam. Studieswere performed to determine if elevated dioxin levels persistin Vietnamese living in the south of Vietnam. METHODS. Withgas chromatography and mass spectroscopy, human milk, adiposetissue, and blood from Vietnamese living in sprayed and unsprayedareas were analyzed, some individually and some pooled, fordioxins and the closely related dibenzofurans. RESULTS. Onehundred sixty dioxin analyses of tissue from 3243 persons wereperformed. Elevated 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD)levels as high as 1832 ppt were found in milk lipid collectedfrom southern Vietnam in 1970, and levels up to 103 ppt werefound in adipose tissue in the 1980s. Pooled blood collectedfrom southern Vietnam in 1991/92 also showed elevated TCDD upto 33 ppt, whereas tissue from northern Vietnam (where AgentOrange was not used) revealed TCDD levels at or below 2.9 ppt.CONCLUSIONS. Although most Agent Orange studies have focusedon American veterans, many Vietnamese had greater exposure.Because health consequences of dioxin contamination are morelikely to be found in Vietnamese living in Vietnam than in anyother populations, Vietnam provides a unique setting for dioxinstudies.
Related articles in AJPH:
Agent Orange in Vietnam.
J H Dwyer and D Flesch-Janys
AJPH 1995 85: 476-478.
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