Concentrations of Lead and Arsenic in Mother's Milk and Children's Blood in Peruvian Breastfeeding Dyads.

J Hum Lact

Environmental Toxicology, Department of Plant and Soil Sciences. Agriculture Science Center North, Kentucky Water Resources Research Institute, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, USA.

Published: February 2024

Background: Toxic trace elements could enter human milk through mothers' food consumption, drinking water, air, or incidental soil ingestion, and are of concern to the nursing infant.

Research Aim: To determine the concentration of toxic trace elements (lead and arsenic) in Peruvian mothers' milk and their association with blood concentrations in their own infants 3-20 months old.

Method: This exploratory, cross-sectional study, carried out in Peru, included breastfeeding mother/child dyads ( = 40). Following standardized protocols, biospecimens of human milk and child's blood were collected.

Results: Lead and arsenic concentrations in milk were above the method detection limits in 73% and 100% of samples with median concentrations of 0.26 µg/L ( = 0.10, 0.33 µg/L) and 0.73 µg/L ( = 0.63, 0.91 µg/L), respectively. Concentrations of lead and arsenic in blood were 2.05 µg/dL ( = 1.35), and 1.43 µg/dl (geometric mean:  = 1.39), respectively. Blood lead concentrations in 12.5% ( = 5) of the samples were above the U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention reference value (< 3.5 µg/dl), and over half of arsenic concentrations were above the acceptable levels of < 1.3 µg/dl (Mayo Clinic Interpretative Handbook). Our results showed that for every one-month increase in age, lead blood concentrations increased by 0.1 µg/dl ( = 0.023). Additionally, every 1 µg/L increase in the mother's milk arsenic was associated with a 1.40 µg/dl increase in the child's blood arsenic concentration.

Conclusions: Implementing effective interventions to decrease the toxic exposure of reproductive-aged women is needed in Peru and worldwide.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10984648PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/08903344231212430DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

lead arsenic
16
concentrations
8
concentrations lead
8
mother's milk
8
toxic trace
8
trace elements
8
human milk
8
blood concentrations
8
child's blood
8
arsenic concentrations
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!