
This widely used endocrine disruptor may be harming your unborn baby
In 2017, Emalee Morem was 40 weeks pregnant with her first child. At the urging of her providers, she had an extra ultrasound, just to make sure the baby was OK. After the scan, Morem and her husband went out for lunch. But sitting in the sunshine on the patio at the restaurant in Minneapolis, Minnesota, Morem started to feel uncomfortable.
โMy belly felt very hot while we were eating,โ Morem says, โand when I got home, I looked at my belly and saw this horrible red, patchy rash.โ
Though the rash wasnโt painful, Morem was concerned.
โIt didnโt hurt, but it obviously wasnโt normal,โ she says. โAnd Iโm sure it was from the ultrasound gel. After the ultrasound they just wiped my belly with a dry paper towel or cloth, so my belly didnโt get washed off well, I could still smell the gel on my skin, and the rash was exactly where theyโd had the gel and doppler.โ
The discomfort, Morem says, was short-lived.
โIt went away after a few hours, but it freaked me out at the time. I was afraid of getting more ultrasounds, too.โ Two weeks later, Morem gave birth to a healthy 7-pound 14-ounce baby girl.
An Endocrine Disruptor?
Could the gel that caused a topical rash on Moremโs abdomen be problematic for another reason? Our bodies use hormonesโchemical signalsโto regulate many different processes. Endocrine disruptors are chemicals that alter our normal hormone levels. Phthalates and certain phenolsโincluding parabens and triclosanโare considered endocrine-disrupting chemicals.
Because pregnancy, like puberty and menopause, is a time of enormous hormonal changes, itโs especially important to steer clear of hormone disruptors. Indeed, studies have shown that unnatural changes in hormone levels can contribute to many negative health effectsโespecially when it comes to reproduction and fetal development.
While each formulation varies by brand, research suggests that some of the gels used to conduct prenatal ultrasound scans may be causing hormone disruption. These thick gels are slathered over a womanโs abdomen in order for the ultrasound transducer to slide easily. They contain a variety of fragrances and dyes, as well as a chemical called propylparaben, which is a phenolโa chemical compound extracted from coal tar. Ultrasound gels may also contain phthalates, used to bind the fragrance and the color.
Dr. Carmen Messerlian and her colleagues in the Department of Environmental Health at Harvard University sought to uncover whether exposure to ultrasound gel disrupts the endocrine system. They published their results, โUltrasound gel as an unrecognized source of exposure to phthalates and phenols among pregnant women undergoing routine scan,โ in the International Journal of Environmental Health in 2017.