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Use of Cosmetics in Pregnancy and Neurotoxicity: Can It Increase the Risk of Congenital Enteric Neuropathies?

Biomolecules 2024 8 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Kendra Jones, Lucas M. Wessel, Karl‐Herbert Schäfer, María Ángeles Tapia-Laliena

Summary

This review examines whether common cosmetic ingredients, including microplastics, parabens, phthalates, and certain metals, could pose neurotoxic risks to developing fetuses when used during pregnancy. Researchers found that several of these substances have been shown to cross biological barriers and interfere with nervous system development in laboratory studies. The study calls for greater caution around cosmetic use during early pregnancy, when the developing nervous system is most vulnerable.

Pregnancy is a particularly vulnerable period for the growing fetus, when exposure to toxic agents, especially in the early phases, can decisively harm embryo development and compromise the future health of the newborn. The inclusion of various chemical substances in personal care products (PCPs) and cosmetic formulations can be associated with disruption and damage to the nervous system. Microplastics, benzophenones, parabens, phthalates and metals are among the most common chemical substances found in cosmetics that have been shown to induce neurotoxic mechanisms. Although cosmetic neurotoxin exposure is believed to be minimal, different exposure scenarios of cosmetics suggest that these neurotoxins remain a threat. Special attention should be paid to early exposure in the first weeks of gestation, when critical processes, like the migration and proliferation of the neural crest derived cells, start to form the ENS. Importantly, cosmetic neurotoxins can cross the placental barrier and affect the future embryo, but they are also secreted in breast milk, so babies remain exposed for longer periods, even after birth. In this review, we explore how neurotoxins contained in cosmetics and PCPs may have a role in the pathogenesis of various neurodevelopmental disorders and neurodegenerative diseases and, therefore, also in congenital enteric aganglionosis as well as in postnatal motility disorders. Understanding the mechanisms of these chemicals used in cosmetic formulations and their role in neurotoxicity is crucial to determining the safety of use for cosmetic products during pregnancy.

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