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Neurotoxicity from prenatal and postnatal exposure to methylmercury. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines the impact of postnatal methylmercury exposure on neurobehavioral development in children, particularly from a Faroese birth cohort.
  • Findings indicate that while there are weak links between children's blood mercury levels and neuropsychological tests at age 7, significant negative effects were observed in visuospatial memory.
  • The results suggest that prenatal exposure is crucial for understanding developmental deficits, and highlight the need for more precise studies on postnatal exposure to accurately assess its effects.

Article Abstract

The extent to which postnatal methylmercury exposure contributes to neurobehavioral delays is uncertain. Confounding may occur because the child's dietary exposure likely correlates with the mother's. This conundrum was examined in the Faroese birth cohort 1 born in 1986-1987. Exposure parameters included mercury concentrations in maternal hair at parturition, cord blood, and child blood and hair at the age-7 clinical examination (N=923). In regression analyses, the child's current blood-mercury at age 7 (N=694) showed only weak associations with the neuropsychological test variables, but visuospatial memory revealed a significant negative association. Mutual adjustment caused decreases of the apparent effect of the prenatal exposure. However, such adjustment may lead to underestimations due to the presence of correlated, error-prone exposure variables. In structural equation models, all methylmercury exposure parameters were instead entered into a latent exposure variable that reflected the total methylmercury load. This latent exposure showed significant associations with neurodevelopmental deficits, with prenatal exposure providing the main information. However, postnatal methylmercury exposure appeared to contribute to neurotoxic effects, in particular in regard to visuospatial processing and memory. Thus, addition in the regression analysis of exposure information obtained at a different point in time was not informative and should be avoided. Further studies with better information on exposure profiles are needed to characterize the effects of postnatal methylmercury exposure.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4066386PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ntt.2014.03.004DOI Listing

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