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Tiny particles: Big potential or big threat?

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Basic unanswered questions include which materials are harmful to humans or the environment, how exposure should be measured and what happens to nanoparticles once they enter a body of water or the soil. In some cases, nanomaterials have been linked to toxic effects but scientists don’t know why the problems occur.

“People think the (nanomaterials) may be bad because they’re in the size range of a virus; so they may go where viruses go, perhaps, triggering an immune response,” said Nancy Monteiro-Riviere, a professor of investigative dermatology and toxicology at North Carolina State University. “Cells within the lymph nodes may pick it up and distribute it.”

But “there are so many different types of nanomaterials and shapes and sizes that every one has to be looked at as an individual particle,” Monteiro-Riviere said. “You can’t generalize.”

In the case of sunscreen, nanoparticle toxicity depends on a variety of factors, including their size, structure, surface properties or coating and ability to aggregate or clump together, forming larger particles.

The main concern involves whether the particles can penetrate the skin barrier. “So far, they have not shown penetration,” said Dr. Steven Q. Wang, director of dermatologic surgery and dermatology at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New Jersey. “But we really don’t know (what happens) if someone is burned, has eczema or a skin condition or the skin isn’t intact.” Though Wang thinks nano-sunscreens are safe for the majority of people, he said it’s also unclear what the risks might be if a child were to lick a hand or arm and ingest the nano sunscreeen.

Exposing the nanomaterials used in sunscreens to the sun’s ultraviolet rays also generates free radicals, which can damage cell membranes. In fact, the size and concentrations of nanoparticles that deliver the best sun protection factor and transparent appearance can also generate the most free radicals, according to a study by Amanda Barnard, an Australian researcher and theoretical physicist who specializes in predicting the real world behavior of nanoparticles.

As a protective measure, the nanoparticles are often coated with a shell that absorbs the free radicals, Wang said. But some remain uneasy about the potential toxicity of the coatings and whether the particles can penetrate cells. For a sunscreen to be listed on MightyNest.com, an online natural products marketplace, it must be mineral based, broad-spectrum and free of nanoparticles.

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