Rhonda Patrick· PhD
a study that analyzed enhan data from over 9,000 participants followed people for about 9 years and found that those people with the highest urinary BPA levels were 1.76 times more likely to die from cardiovas vascular disease interestingly these effects were far more pronounced in women so women in the highest exposure group had about a 2.8 times higher risk of a cardiovascular death compared to women in the lowest group for BPA levels for men there was still an elevated risk but it was not as extreme