Thermal paper cash register receipts account for high bisphenol-A levels in humans

03 Dec 2014

1

Bisphenol A (BPA) is a chemical that is used in a variety of consumer products, such as water bottles, dental composites and resins used to line metal food and beverage containers, and also is used in thermal paper cash register receipts. Now, research conducted at the University of Missouri (MU) is providing the first data that BPA from thermal paper used in cash register receipts accounts for high levels of BPA in humans. Subjects studied showed a rapid increase of BPA in their blood after using a skin care product and then touching a store receipt with BPA.

''BPA first was developed by a biochemist and tested as an artificial oestrogen supplement,'' says Frederick vom Saal, Curators Professor of Biological Sciences in the College of Arts and Science at MU. ''As an endocrine disrupting chemical, BPA has been demonstrated to alter signalling mechanisms involving oestrogen and other hormones. Store and fast food receipts, airline tickets, ATM receipts and other thermal papers all use massive amounts of BPA on the surface of the paper as a print developer. The problem is, we as consumers have hand sanitizers, hand creams, soaps and sunscreens on our hands that drastically alter the absorption rate of the BPA found on these receipts.''

In the study, researchers tested human subjects who cleaned their hands with hand sanitiser and then held thermal paper receipts. As an added step, subjects who had handled the thermal paper then ate French fries with their hands. The result was that BPA was absorbed very rapidly, vom Saal adds.

''Our research found that large amounts of BPA can be transferred to your hands and then to the food you hold and eat as well as be absorbed through your skin,'' vom Saal explains.

''BPA exhibits hormone-like properties and has been proven to cause reproductive defects in fetuses, infants, children and adults as well as cancer, metabolic and immune problems in rodents. BPA from thermal papers will be absorbed into your blood rapidly; at those levels, many diseases such as diabetes and disorders such as obesity increase as well. Use of BPA or other similar chemicals that are being used to replace BPA in thermal paper pose a threat to human health,'' he adds.

Latest articles

Musk ramps up SpaceX moon plans as Bezos accelerates Blue Origin in race against China

Musk ramps up SpaceX moon plans as Bezos accelerates Blue Origin in race against China

Indians can now travel to 56 destinations without prior visa as passport ranking improves

Indians can now travel to 56 destinations without prior visa as passport ranking improves

CEO says EU’s IRIS2 must match Starlink on price and performance

CEO says EU’s IRIS2 must match Starlink on price and performance

Applied Materials jumps 12% as AI chip demand drives strong revenue forecast

Applied Materials jumps 12% as AI chip demand drives strong revenue forecast

Opening the silos: India approves 3 million tonnes of wheat and product exports

Opening the silos: India approves 3 million tonnes of wheat and product exports

Capgemini beats 2025 revenue target as WNS acquisition boosts AI-driven growth

Capgemini beats 2025 revenue target as WNS acquisition boosts AI-driven growth

The deregulation “holy grail”: Trump EPA dismantles the legal bedrock of climate policy

The deregulation “holy grail”: Trump EPA dismantles the legal bedrock of climate policy

France-backed Eutelsat beats revenue estimates as Starlink rivalry intensifies

France-backed Eutelsat beats revenue estimates as Starlink rivalry intensifies

Germany’s Stark reportedly crosses €1 billion valuation after fresh funding round

Germany’s Stark reportedly crosses €1 billion valuation after fresh funding round