Publications by authors named "M Vahter"

Background: Early-life lead exposure affects cognitive development and emerging evidence suggests similar effects of cadmium and fluoride.

Objective: To assess the impact of gestational and childhood exposure to lead, cadmium, and fluoride on cognitive abilities and behavioral and social communication problems.

Methods: We studied 470 pregnant women (gestational week 29) and their 4-year-old children from the NICE cohort in northern Sweden.

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Introduction: Placental function is essential for fetal development, but it may be susceptible to malnutrition and environmental stressors.

Objective: To assess the impact of toxic and essential trace elements in placenta on placental function.

Methods: Toxic metals (cadmium, lead, mercury, cobalt) and essential elements (copper, manganese, zinc, selenium) were measured in placenta of 406 pregnant women in northern Sweden using ICP-MS.

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Toxic metal contaminants present in food and water have widespread effects on health and disease. Chalcophiles, such as arsenic, cadmium, and mercury, show a high affinity to selenium and exposure to these metals could have a modulating effect on enzymes dependent on selenocysteine in their active sites. The aim of this study was to assess the influence of these metals on the activity of the selenoprotein glutathione peroxidase 1 (GPX1) in erythrocytes of 100 children residing in rural Bangladesh, where drinking water often contains arsenic.

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Studies have indicated that early-life exposure to toxic metals and fluoride affects the immune system, but evidence regarding their role in allergic disease development is scarce. We aimed to evaluate the relations of exposure to such compounds in 482 pregnant women and their infants (4 months of age) with food allergy and atopic eczema diagnosed by a paediatric allergologist at 1 year of age within the Swedish birth-cohort NICE (Nutritional impact on Immunological maturation during Childhood in relation to the Environment). Urinary cadmium and erythrocyte cadmium, lead, and mercury concentrations were measured by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS), urinary inorganic arsenic metabolites by ICP-MS after separation by ion exchange chromatography, and urinary fluoride by an ion-selective electrode.

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Introduction: Elevated phosphate (P) in urine may reflect a high intake of inorganic P salts from food additives. Elevated P in plasma is linked to vascular dysfunction and calcification.

Objective: To explore associations between P in urine as well as in plasma and questionnaire-estimated P intake, and incidence of cardiovascular disease (CVD).

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