Aluminum - Why a Concern in Drinking
Water?
For years, researchers have puzzled over the surprisingly
high levels of aluminum that turn up in the shriveled brains of
Alzheimer's disease victims. While some scientists believe that
the aluminum deposits are only a side effect of Alzheimer's, a
growing number of investigators say that aluminum may play a
central role in causing the disease that afflicts mostly
elderly people. Aluminum occurs naturally in some waters but is
also introduced as aluminum sulphate by some municipal water
departments to remove fine particles, color and bacteria.
Municipal water departments usually control the water to a
slightly alkaline condition, i.e., pH between 7 and 8. In
alkaline conditions aluminum precipitates as fine solid
particles, which are then filtered out by means of sand
filters. However, sand filters become less efficient for
particles as small as 4 to 5 microns and therefore fine
particles slip through.
The latest evidence of a link emerged when Australian
scientists reported that aluminum used to purify water
accumulated in the brains of laboratory rats. The Australian
study focused new interest on the issue at a time when Ottawa’s
environmental health directorate is preparing to propose
Canada's first national guidelines for aluminum levels in
drinking water. The Australian study was important, said the
directorate's chief, Dr. Barry Thomas, because it showed that
aluminum in drinking water can be absorbed by the body. "As to
whether it actually causes memory loss and brain damage," added
Thomas, "there is not conclusive evidence. But we fear that it
may." Although tiny amounts of aluminum are used in a variety
of products, including antacids, antiperspirants, and some
processed foods, the metal is pervasively present in drinking
water. The reason: municipalities in Canada and other countries
often use aluminum sulphate, or alum, to remove mineral
particles from water in filtration plants, a process that
leaves an aluminum residue in the water.
In the past, studies in Canada and other countries have
pointed to links between aluminum and Alzheimer's. University
of Toronto researchers found in a 1991 study that they could
slow the rate of deterioration in Alzheimer's patients by
treating them with a drug that removed some aluminum from their
brains.
In a far-reaching study published in January (1995), William
Forbes, a university of Waterloo gerontologist, demonstrated an
apparent connection between mental impairment and aluminum in
about 100 Ontario communities. In each community, researchers
determined the amount of aluminum in the water supply and
tested the mental state of people starting at the age of 45 and
continuing over a period of 35 years. They concluded, said
Forbes, that the risk of impaired mental functions was "almost
10 times higher in areas where the aluminum levels in drinking
water were high."
Since Doulton ceramic filter elements efficiently filter to
less than 1 micron; they effectively remove most of the
residual aluminum. 200ppb (parts per billion) is the maximum
level likely to be encountered in our water supply. It is also
the maximum allowable level stipulated by the EEC regulations
but the recommended guide level is 50ppb.
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