Exposure to environmental and workplace hazards like mutagens and chemicals can cause DNA damage and increase cancer risk. — Whalespan
Exposure to environmental and workplace hazards like mutagens and chemicals can cause DNA damage and increase cancer risk.
⚠ High risk
We can't find evidence that holds up here. Proponents are reasoning from mechanism or analogy rather than direct human data, and the most credible skeptics raise objections we can't dismiss.
✕NOTSUPPORTED
⚠
High-risk intervention — consult a physician before acting.Drug-drug interactions, dose-dependence, and screening contraindications apply.
“Um, environmental sort of and workplace hazards, you know, like known mutagens. If you work in a laboratory, you're working with mutagens, right? You're working with things that literally pull DNA apart. Yes. This always worried me working in a laboratory. There are a lot of carcinogenic chemicals in a laboratory for good reason. Yeah. This is the Yeah, we're we're trying to study cancer, but we're certainly working around a lot of things that could cause cancer, chemicals, radiation. Uh, yeah, I don't know if you about you. I did a lot of lot of experiments radio lababeling cells. Yeah. I mean we well fortunately we worked with uh, you know, radiotagged amino acids with radiation that was we were told and I do believe was not not as as dangerous as some of the others but yeah I mean so chemical exposures are a big one. Yep. And so those those labels on paints and thinners and stuff in the garage that's real that's a real thing. They mutate cells”
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