I hate mosquitos as much as the next person. I have looked up Aqua-Reslin 20-20 (what we will be spraying) and its main ingredient is Permethrin. Pls note that this is a synthetic and not the natural pyrethrin that has less problems. It is a neurotoxin with much info, some newer, from the EPA. It states that children are most susceptible but that even with adults the amounts required for a reaction vary widely. Spraying doesn't even get to where mosquitos live and breed in this area. This can't be our best solution. http://www.epa.gov/teach/chem_summ/pyrethroids_summary.pdf Revised 2007 (most recent I found). Very possible that this info has not made it through all channels yet who had decided to spray this in previous years with older data.
Some excerpts from the above link:
Children are likely to be exposed to permethrin or resmethrin following use of products containing these insecticides, including pet flea control products (i.e. pet flea shampoos) on pets, lice shampoos, and community spraying with mosquito abatement products (1).
Studies in adult humans and experimental animals have demonstrated that permethrin, like other pyrethroids, alters nerve function by altering the biochemistry of nerve membrane sodium channels (2, 4). Acute exposure to permethrin or resmethrin in adults has been shown to result in skin irritation, dizziness, twitching, and nervous disorders (i.e., movement problems) (1-3). There are some developmental studies of the health effects of permethrin and resmethrin exposure. Reported effects include increased incidence of anti-nuclear antibodies which are markers of potential autoimmune disease (5), skin irritation (6), and respiratory irritation (6). One study demonstrated changes in neurologically-active proteins (c-fos and Brain-Derived Neurotropic Factor, or BDNF) in young mice exposed to permethrin from birth via breast milk (7). Evidence is accumulating that pyrethroid exposure may also be neurotoxic during development (8).
III. TOXICITY SUMMARY5, 6
Exposures to pyrethroids in adult humans have resulted in skin irritant effects, dizziness, twitching, and nervous disorders; and the dose ranges at which symptoms occur vary widely for the different pyrethroids (1-4). Recent studies of children reported immunotoxic effects following exposure to pyrethroids, with increased incidence of anti-nuclear antibodies associated with autoimmune disease (5), and dermal irritation (including urticaria, which is red, itchy patches on the skin) (6). Respiratory irritation was also reported (6).
Carcinogenicity Weight of Evidence Classification7: The U.S. EPA Office of Pesticide Programs (OPP) Cancer Assessment Review Committee (CARC), in 2006, classified permethrin as "likely to be carcinogenic in humans" following oral, dermal, and inhalation exposure based on two reproducible benign tumor types (lung and liver) in the mouse, equivocal evidence of carcinogenicity in rats, and supporting structural activity relationship information with a Q1*=9.6x10-
- < Permethrin exposure may impact the immune system in children. The presence of anti-nuclear antibodies in blood, a marker of potential or existing autoimmune disease, in children and adults was associated with estimated exposure (personal questionnaire) to permethrin (5). The incidence of anti-nuclear antibodies between age groups was similar in this study (5). Also, case reports indicated that children exposed to permethrin developed immune-mediated respiratory and dermal irritation (6).