A new study published in journal Cancer Research Dietary reveals that dietary cadmium exposure increases the risk of postmenopausal breast cancer, confirming earlier research that a broad range of metals we are now increasingly being exposed to represent an emerging class of “metalloestrogens” with the potential to add to the estrogenic burden of the human breast.
Nursing school researchers have determined that a majority of mothers' breastmilk and the urine of low-exposure babies contain the hormone disruptor bisphenol A (BPA).
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