Impact of organic mercury exposure and home delivery on neurodevelopment of Amazonian children.
Int J Hyg Environ Health
; 219(6): 498-502, 2016 08.
Article
en En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-27265298
In the transitioning Amazon, we addressed birth environment (home vs hospital) and associated perinatal organic-Hg exposures: methylmercury (MeHg) from maternal fish consumption and ethylmercury (EtHg) from pediatric Thimerosal-containing vaccines (TCVs) taken systematically during hospital delivery. We studied 365 children in relation to linear growth at 60 months and neurodevelopment (milestone achievements, Bayley Scale of Infant Development/BSID at 24 months, and Stanford-Binet intelligence tests at 60 months). Mothers delivered in hospitals vs those gave birth at home had significantly (p<0.0001) lower hair-Hg (HHg) concentrations (12.2 vs 23.9µg/g respectively) and shorter length of breastfeeding (8.5 vs 9.7 months respectively). Home-born children had significantly (p<0.0001) higher HHg (7.1µg/g) than hospital-born children (4.6µg/g). Hospital-born children also had significantly earlier (p<0.0001) hepatitis B vaccine than home-born children (1.5 vs 24.1days respectively) and higher (p<0.0001) exposures to total TCV-EtHg (75.8 vs 49.3µg respectively). Neither anthropometric indices nor neurodevelopment (except for fluid reasoning) were directly affected by birth environment. The percentage of hospital-born children with BSID (MDI or PDI) scores <80 was not significantly different from those born at home. In spite of the differences in HHg and EtHg levels between hospital-born and home-born children, no impact on neurodevelopment was observed.
Palabras clave
Texto completo:
1
Banco de datos:
MEDLINE
Asunto principal:
Desarrollo Infantil
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Exposición Materna
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Contaminantes Ambientales
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Parto Domiciliario
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Compuestos de Metilmercurio
Límite:
Animals
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Child, preschool
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Female
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Humans
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Pregnancy
País como asunto:
America do sul
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Brasil
Idioma:
En
Año:
2016
Tipo del documento:
Article