No. It's a myth.
This is another myth/hoax/urban legend. The American Cancer Society has this to say about 'sodium lauroy' (Sodium Laureth Sulfate):
"Shampoo
Rumor:
One chain email floating through cyberspace says a common ingredient in many health and beauty aids is known to cause cancer. The warning reads: “Check the ingredients listed on your shampoo bottle, and see if they have this substance by the name of Sodium Laureth Sulfate, or simply SLS. This substance is found in most shampoos, and the manufacturers use it because it produces a lot of foam and it is cheap. BUT the fact is that SLS is used to scrub garage floors, and it is very strong. It is also proven that it can cause cancer in the long run. I went home and checked my shampoo (Vidal Sasoon), it doesn't contain it; however, others such as Vo5, Palmolive, Paul Mitchell, the new Hemp shampoo, etc. contains this substance."
Fact:
Sodium lauryl sulfate (SLS) and its chemical cousin sodium laureth sulfate (SLES) are known irritants, not known carcinogens. SLS and SLES are powerful surfactants (wetting agents) and detergents. They have industrial uses because they are detergents that exert emulsifying action, thereby removing oil and soil. There is no way of knowing where this Internet information comes from, but there are a variety of Web sites offering health and beauty products that are SLS-free. According to David Emery and his Urban Legends website, "All these Web sites are maintained by 'independent distributors' for various multi-level marketing companies hawking natural personal care products. As a matter of fact, the majority of URLs returned in a standard Web search on the keywords 'sodium laureth sulfate' all point to versions of the same propaganda."
http://www.cancer.org/docroot/MED/content/MED_6_1x_Shampoo.asp?sitearea=MED
2006-11-07 23:38:08
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answer #1
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answered by Panda 7
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The undesirable wellness care professional has fallen sufferer to rumors and folklore, or being staying up too previous due! almost a decade in the past, there replaced right into a circulating rumor asserting that sod. laureth (or lauryl) sulfate motives maximum cancers. there is genuinely NO medical info that it does. wellness Canada and the yankee maximum cancers Society, between others, have suggested so. besides, the quantity of SLS in toothpaste is particularly small.
2016-10-15 12:05:54
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answer #2
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answered by sitton 4
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Sodium laureate is a surfactant. It is the sodium salt of lauric acid, a short chain fatty acid found in coconut oil. It is harmless.
2006-11-07 07:12:44
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answer #3
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answered by JOHN M 5
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Sodium laurate?
Sodium lauryl sulfate?
These are simple detergents. They can be irritants (like all detergents), dry skin, and so on. There is no link with cancer.
2006-11-07 07:01:10
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answer #4
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answered by novangelis 7
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