Back in the mid 1990s local wildlife rehabilitator Judy Hoy raised a cry of alarm about the high incidence of developmental malformations in local wildlife that she was observing. She had begun to observe and document a rising incidence of malformations in White-tailed deer in the Bitterroot Valley. The malformations included a high incidence of brachygnathia superior, or under bite, and malformations of the male genitalia including undescended testicles and misaligned hemiscota (that is one scrotal sac aligned behind the other rather than side by side). See full story…
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June 5, 2011 at 3:20 pm |
Obviously, when medical doctors and veterinarians see serious symptoms of chemical poisoning on people and animals, they should not disregard them because of the assumption that there is not a high enough exposure level to cause such symptoms. Also, reaction to chemical exposure results in both inflammation and epigenetic changes to the cells, which have been found by research scientists to be the two most important factors in nearly every common cancer.