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Toxic Inheritance: Why Harmful Chemicals Are Even More of a Problem Than We Thought

Posted on Wednesday, March 11, 2026
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by Outside Contributor
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What if a single exposure to a toxic chemical could have effects that continued to ramify for the next 20 generations, causing chronic disease symptoms that got worse, not better, as time passed?

Sounds like a nightmare, doesn’t it? But new research in rats suggests that possibility could be very real, and it might help explain why rates of chronic diseases have exploded in recent decades—everything from Alzheimer’s to autism—without any sign of improvement.

The “epigenetic inheritance of disease” is a field of study that’s barely 20 years old. Research by scientists like Michael Skinner, at Washington State University, has shown that toxic substances can change processes that regulate how genes are turned on or off—processes like DNA methylation—and these changes at the epigenetic level can then be passed on by mother and father to their offspring.

What’s particularly worrying about the findings of this research is that the effects can be transmitted through multiple generations, and they can actually get worse the further you get from initial exposure.

A new study, co-authored by Skinner, looks at a fungicide called vinclozolin. Sold under the brand names Ronilan and Vorlan, vinclozolin was introduced at the beginning of the 1980s for use on lawns and fruit and vegetables, especially grapevines.

Animal testing soon revealed a wide range of negative effects. The chemical was linked to various kinds of cancer, reproductive and metabolic abnormalities, and kidney disease. Like many so-called “endocrine-disrupting” chemicals, vinclozolin alters the body’s hormonal function, blocking androgen receptors that respond to male hormones like testosterone. Endocrine-disrupting chemicals can interfere with vital processes of sexual differentiation and development, right from the moment of conception, through infancy and childhood, and into adulthood.

Widespread exposure to these chemicals is among the believed causes of the catastrophic decline in fertility that’s taking place across the Western world. By 2050, according to one expert in reproductive health, the median man could have a sperm count of zero: one half of all men will have none, and the other half will have so few, they might as well have none.

Vinclozolin is banned in the EU, and the Environmental Protection Agency began phasing it out of use in the US food supply in the early 2000s. Last year, it was classified by the International Agency for Research on Cancer as “possibly carcinogenic to humans.”

In the study mentioned above, researchers exposed pregnant rats to vinclozolin and then bred the offspring for 23 generations to observe the epigenetic effects. A control group, with no ancestral exposure to vinclozolin, was also bred for the same number of generations.

At one year of age, the rats were tested for disease. Samples of various tissues were taken, including sperm, testicular and ovarian tissue, kidney tissue, and fat.

The researchers found that by the 23rd generation, the rats had accumulated massive epigenetic changes across the genome, in regions governing the metabolism, hormones, and organ function. Most of the changes were concentrated in the maternal rather than the paternal line—470 changes compared to 64.

Later generations suffered higher rates of kidney, prostate, testicular, and ovarian disease. They became overweight or obese on the same diet as the control rats, that remained lean.

Fertility plummeted, for both males and females: birth complications increased, and sperm counts decreased significantly. Around the 20th generation after exposure, it became harder and harder for the females to give birth successfully. Either the mother would die in childbirth, or the entire litter of pups would die.

If the findings of this study were directly transferable to humans, we could expect to see worsening changes for hundreds of years—more than half a millennium, in fact—after initial exposure.

Rats aren’t people, of course, so some caution is necessary when applying these shocking findings to us. Still, human studies have shown similar findings, including transgenerational changes to fertility for both sexes.

If epigenetic mechanisms are at work in the inheritance of disease risk, it would help to explain the current epidemic of chronic disease and why it continues to snowball. Autism, for example, has increased from 1 in 150 American children in the year 2000, to 1 in 31 children. Seventy percent of adult Americans are now overweight or obese.

The diseases the rats fell prey to are some of the very same chronic diseases Americans and people throughout the Western world suffer from today. And this is just one chemical. There are thousands, even tens of thousands, we’re exposed to now on a daily basis. Many are already known to be harmful, but the vast majority have little to no safety data whatsoever. They’ve never been tested. We simply don’t know what they’re doing to us—on their own, or in combination.

If the epigenetic inheritance of disease is real, and cuts anywhere near as deep as this new study suggests, we’ll need a total rethink of the way chemicals are tested and regulated. At present, regulators barely consider the transgenerational effects of exposure to chemicals, and they certainly don’t consider the knock-on effects 10 or 20 generations down the line. That will have to change.

And we’ll also have to reckon with the unfortunate truth that even if we eliminate harmful chemicals, their effects will still be with us, passing down the generations silently and imperceptibly by means of processes like DNA methylation. New diagnostic tools and treatments will be needed to identify harmful changes and put an end to this toxic inheritance.

Dr. Charles Cornish-Dale (aka Raw Egg Nationalist) is the author of “The Eggs Benedict Option,” which is available from Amazon and other third-party retailers.

Reprinted with Permission from The Epoch Times – By Dr. Charles Cornish-Dale

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of AMAC or AMAC Action.

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Michael J
Michael J
2 months ago

Chemicals are just the tip of the iceberg. I noticed there was no mention of pharmaceuticals in the form of prescription medicine or even over the counter poisons. These long chain molecules are everywhere and we’re accustomed and numb to the label warnings. Or as the medical profession touts “the benefits out weight the potential risks”. How many times have we heard, “better living through chemistry”? But if the issue is fear, be like California and put a warning label on literally everything. Now you’ve been warned. It’s on to the next thing that’s bad for you. There’s a reason those warning labels are written in legalese, just in case. I’m glad someone is paying attention and that’s a beginning.

Frank Sinatra
Frank Sinatra
2 months ago

Now that is some scary shit.

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