Your suhaag may be safe, but sindoor may not be. Study shows hazards

A study points out a need to monitor lead levels in sindoor and make users aware of its potential hazards.

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Photo: Jaydeep Saha
Photo: Jaydeep Saha

In Short

  • Sindoor may contain unsafe levels of lead which can cause health hazards.
  • Sindoor and Kajal are well known to contain lead and other heavy metals.
  • There is a need to make its users aware of its potential hazards.

Sindoor, a powder widely used in Hindu religious ceremonies can may contain unsafe levels of lead which is associated with lower IQ and growth delays in children, a study of samples from India and the US has found.

Researchers from Rutgers University in the US reported that 83 per cent of the samples collected from the US and 78 per cent collected from India had at least 1.0 microgramme of lead per gram of the cosmetic powder.

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Meanwhile, 19 per cent of the samples collected in New Jersey and 43 per collected from India exceeded the 20-microgramme of lead per gramme of cosmetic powder limit imposed by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

"There is no safe level of lead. That's why we believe sindoor powder shouldn't be sold or brought into the US unless it is lead free," said Derek Shendell, Associate Professor at Rudgers.

Researchers tested 118 samples of sindoor, a scarlet-coloured powder that is used by women to place a bindi or red dot cosmetically on their foreheads.

Married women also put it in their hair parting and it is used by men and children for religious purposes also.

The results indicated about one-third of the samples which include 95 from South Asian stores in New Jersey and 23 from stores in Mumbai and New Delhi in India containing lead levels above the limit set by the US FDA.

"Sindoor and Kajal are well known to contain lead and other heavy metals with risk of kidney, hepatic, skin disorders. Risk of heavy metals on skin leads to DNA damage, Kertaodermas and skin ulceration, nail and teeth changes," said Dr Nitin S Walia, Senior Consultant, Dermatology, BLK Super Speciality Hospital.

"Problem is throughout Asia especially India, Pakistan, Middle East, SE Asia. Poor quality cosmetics (contain) Lead, Mercury, Chromium, Cadmium, Zinc," said Walia who was not a part of the research team.

Although other cosmetics such as kajal and tiro, eye products used in India and Nigeria have been banned by the FDA because of elevated lead content. The FDA only issued a general warning about sindoor after testing by the Illinois Department of Health but a decade ago discovered a high lead content in one brand.

Researchers said at a minimum that there is a need to monitor sindoor lead levels and to make the public aware of its potential hazards.

"We screen kids who live in houses built prior to 1978 with lead-based paint," said William Halperin, Professor at Rutgers.

"We should be screening children from the South Asian community to make sure that they do not have elevated levels of lead in their blood, before we discover more dead brain cells," Halperin said.

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The researchers are concerned about the amount of sindoor potentially entering the country on a weekly basis through the four international airports in the New York and New Jersey Metropolitan area, including Philadelphia.

Halperin said, he took a trip to India and brought back sindoor but was not stopped by US Customs. Researchers said that the government should look at this as a public health issue and not rely on consumers to make the right choices.

It is difficult to determine exactly which products contains lead in variety of sindoor available as the number of products which contained lead in this study is high.

The study was published in the Journal of Public Health.