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Editor's Choice | This Week in BMJ | Press releases
BMJ No 7129 Volume 316 Letters Saturday 7 February 1998 Media are too eager to link silicone to diseaseSee Editorial, p 403 and Paper (abstract only) p 417
Editor, Use of silicone is common. Some teats of infant bottles are made of silicone (box), and all are lubricated with silicone oil; baby milk formulas contain silicone. Silicone in breast milk is independent of the presence of silicone implants. Ten million bottles of dimethicone (for colic and griping pain) are sold each year. 'Second generation silicone disease' is promoted by a small group
of American s
Shanklin and Smalley developed a T lymphocyte stimulation test for
silicone sensitivity,(3) believing that reaction to
crystalline silica was equivalent to reaction to silicone. Crystalline
silica, a known immunostimulant, is not a component of breast implants.
The implant envelope contains amorphous silica; conversion to
crystalline silica requires high temperatures and catalysts. They
believe, controversially, that silica arises in vivo from degradation
of silicone. There is no valid assay for silicone itself
The legitimacy of the test has been refuted in the United States.
Shanklin et al have reported that 2,000 lymphocyte tests had been
performed at $350 per test,(4) and their work has been given
wide exposure in the media. The media seem eager to seize on any
negative information about silicone implants or proponents of it, often
allowing little time for an objective scientific response.
In a recent letter to the lord chancellor, four professors
(including the chairpersons of the 1992 United States Food and Drug
Administration panel and 1992 Canadian government investigation)
expressed their dismay that the British legal process may fall prey to
unreliable scientific evidence. They reminded him that the United
Kingdom Medical Devices Agency's review panel on breast implants has
twice concluded that there is no evidence of a connection between
breast implants and systemic disease. They warn of the 'price paid in
North America as a direct result of such ...
litigation.'
Nicholas Collis
Specialist registrar in plastic and
reconstructive surgery
References
1 Levine J J, Ilowite N T. Sclerodermalike esophageal disease in
children breast-fed by mothers with silicone breast implants.
JAMA 1994;271:213-6.
2 Sclerodermalike esophageal disease in children of mothers with
silicone breast implants. [Letters.] JAMA
1994;272:767-70.
3 Smalley D L, Shanklin D R, Hall M F, Stevens M V, Hanissian A.
Immunologic stimulation of T lymphocytes by silica after use of
silicone mammary implants. FASEB 1995;9:424-7.
4 Shanklin D L, Smalley D L, Hall M F, Stevens M V. T
cell-mediated immune response in silicone breast implant patients.
Curr Top Microbiol Immunol 1996;210:227-36.
5 Smalley D L, Levine J J, Shanklin D R, Hall M F, Stevens M V.
Lymphocyte response to silica among offspring of silicone breast
implant recipients. Immunobiology
1996/97;196:567-74.
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