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Petroleum Distillate in Your Lip Gloss
and Furniture Polish Shown to Cause Tissue Disease!
by SixWise.com
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Petroleum distillates, made in huge plants like these and found
in everything from gasoline to deodorant, may increase your risk
of UCTD, a chronic inflammatory autoimmune disease.
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Perhaps you have never heard of petroleum distillates before, or given
them much thought if you have, but it is almost certain you've used products
that contain them - perhaps daily. These compounds, which are also called
hydrocarbons or petrochemicals, are extracted by distillation during the
refining of crude oil, and they're used as heating agents, propellants
(gasoline) and solvents.
A study in the American Journal of Epidemiology found that being exposed
to petroleum distillates increases the risk of developing undifferentiated
connective tissue disease (UCTD), a chronic inflammatory autoimmune disease
that involves a disorder of the body's connective tissues.
UCTD could include symptoms from, or evolve into any combination of,
connective tissue diseases like lupus, scleroderma, polymyositis, vasculitis,
rheumatoid arthritis, Sjogren's syndrome or fibromyalgia, yet has not
met the official diagnostic criteria to be diagnosed as such.
Where are Petroleum Distillates Found?
Petroleum distillates are in hundreds of consumer products including:
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Hair conditioner
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Sunblock
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Nail polish
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Deodorant
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Mineral oil
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Lip gloss
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Gasoline
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Fertilizer
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Furniture polish
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Pesticides
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Plastics
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Paint thinners
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Solvents
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Motor oil
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Fuels (propane, butane, diesel)
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Petroleum jelly
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Art supplies (oil painting medium)
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Paste and liquid car waxes and polishes
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Kerosene
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Paraffin wax
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Tar
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Adhesives
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According to the EPA, "Products that contain petroleum distillates
should be used carefully. Wear gloves to avoid skin contact and avoid
breathing vapors of volatile compounds."
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Hundreds of products, including lip gloss, nail polish and hair
conditioner, contain petroleum distillates that the EPA says should
be used with caution.
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That's because, in addition to raising the risk
of UCTD, petroleum distillates can cause chemical pneumonia and can interfere
with the lungs' functions-even resulting in death-if inhaled or swallowed.
They can also irritate the skin and cause sensitivity to light.
Can Petroleum Distillates be Avoided?
As it stands, the average household contains,
in the form of chemical products, about 10 gallons of potentially hazardous
petrochemicals. Many, many household cleaners are based on
petrochemicals, and while manufacturers are required to include warning
labels on products that contain them, a New York Poison Control Center
study found that 85 percent of product warning labels are inadequate.
So, when you clean, always seek out natural cleaners and use PerfectClean's
ultramicrofiber cloths, which require the
use of no cleaners at all yet clean down to a microscopic level-something
ordinary cloth wipes can't do.
Further, petroleum distillates pose the greatest
risk when they're breathed in. According to the EPA, even small
amounts can cause harm. That's why ensuring that the air you breathe in
your home is clean and free from toxins has become as important and necessary
as locking your doors at night. Unfortunately, with all of the chemical
products our society has come to rely on, indoor air can be two to 100
times more polluted than outdoor air, says the EPA!
If you're in the market for a truly superior air purification system,
we urge you to check out The
Pionair Air Treatment System. It utilizes "photocatalysis"
technology-the top-recommended air purifying methodology (see
comparison chart by clicking here)-to clean your indoor air, a process
that replicates nature's own method of purifying the air outside.
When it comes to reducing your exposure to petroleum distillates, avoiding
noxious chemical cleaners and other chemical products and purifying the
air you and your family breathe while indoors are two of the best steps
you can take.
Recommended Reading
The
Health Dangers of Phenols Found in Common Household Cleaners
Exposure
to Air Pollution Linked to Genetic Abnormalities
Dust
Dangers: What Exactly is Dust, and Why Can it be so Dangerous
Sources
Environmental
Protection Agency: Petroleum
Household
Products Database
American
Journal of Epidemiology
Express
Newsline January 16, 2005
Household
Products Database
Petroleum
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