Michigan: A new study suggests that exposure to toxic heavy metals may cause a number of health problems in middle-aged women as they age.
According to media reports, in this research conducted by American experts, a relationship has been found between the exposure to toxic metals and the reduction of sperm in the ovaries of women before the age of menopause.
Sung Kyun Park, associate professor of epidemiology and environmental health sciences at the University of Michigan, said that widespread exposure to toxic metals has a major impact on women’s health by prematurely reducing ovulation. It does.
Apart from this, medical problems also increase the chances of weak bones, heart disease and decline in mental abilities. He said that this study clearly shows that women whose urine contains certain amounts of heavy metals such as arsenic, cadmium, mercury and lead have lower levels of the reproductive hormone antimalarial hormone (AMH) in their blood. It decreases.
The aforementioned study has been published in the scientific journal ‘Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism’.
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