Guest guest Posted February 28, 2001 Report Share Posted February 28, 2001 << Environmental Health Perspectives Volume 107, Number 11, November 1999 More Evidence of Mercury Effects in Children In research published last summer, scientists revealed that prenatal exposure to methylmercury, an organic form of mercury that accumulates in animal tissues, may affect the blood pressure and ability to respond to sensory stimuli in exposed children later in life. The team is now also confirming findings of mercury-related neurodevelopmental effects among the Faroese subjects by studying a cohort of Madeiran children. The reports are the latest work of Philippe Grandjean, an adjunct professor of public health at Boston University in Massachusetts, and Pál Weihe, medical director of the Faroese Hospital System in Tórshavn, who, with their colleagues, have performed extensive analysis of a longitudinal study on the effects of prenatal methylmercury exposure among the inhabitants of the Faroe Islands. The Faroe Islands study was funded by the NIEHS along with European grant-making bodies including the European Commission Environment Research Programme and the Danish Medical Research Council. The Faroese were chosen as study subjects because their diet is rich in pilot whale meat, a prime source of methylmercury. In the study of 917 Faroese children, prenatal exposure to methylmercury was assessed by analyzing mercury concentrations in cord blood and maternal hair. At age 7, the children underwent extensive neurobehavioral testing as well as a general health examination. A paper published in the July 1999 issue of Epidemiology describes mercury-related cardiovascular risk factors that were identified among the Faroese children during the general health exam. Because of earlier case reports and experimental findings of cardiovascular effects of mercury, the children were examined for blood pressure, heart rate, and heart rate variability. As a whole, the children had normal blood pressure for their age. But among children whose cord blood mercury content had been measured at 1-10 µg/L, the scientists found that blood pressure was raised by an average of 14 points. The effect was magnified in children with lower birth weights, whose blood pressure was raised by as much as 21 points. No additional increase was seen in children whose cord blood mercury concentration had been higher than 10 µg/L. The scientists also found that heart rate variability decreased with increasing mercury exposures, particularly in boys in the 1-10 µg/L exposure range. Grandjean explains, " The heart rate must vary in accordance with the varying needs for oxygen of the peripheral tissues. This variation is regulated through the autonomic nervous system. A decreased variability is a sign of abnormality, as the heart then is slower in responding to the body needs. " The Epidemiology findings are especially interesting from a public health perspective because childhood blood pressure has been shown to be an important predictor for hypertension later in life. The findings also indicate that prenatal exposure to methylmercury at concentrations below current exposure limits can cause adverse health effects. The daily intake reference dose of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is 0.1 µg/kg body weight per day, an intake that Grandjean says would correspond to mercury concentrations of about 5 µg/L in cord blood and about 1 µg/g in hair. In a related study (not funded by the NIEHS), that was published in the July/August 1999 issue of Neurotoxicology and Teratology, Grandjean and colleagues examined 149 children on the island of Madeira, off the coast of Morocco. The Madeiran children were exposed to methylmercury when their mothers ate the deep-sea fish black scabbard while pregnant. The children's hair mercury concentration at the time of the test was measured to determine current exposure level. Hair samples were also collected from the mothers, with the hair of those whose diet hadn't changed over the past seven years (some 80% of the mothers) serving as an indicator of methylmercury exposure at the time of pregnancy. The children then underwent neuropsychological and neurophysiological testing, including assessment of evoked potentials (electrical signals from the brain that are evoked by sensory stimuli). The results of prenatal exposure would logically be linked to the maternal hair mercury concentrations, which in the Madeiran cohort were found to vary from 1.1 to 54.1 µg/g. The scientists found that certain evoked potentials tended to be slower in children who had been exposed to higher concentrations of mercury. According to the report, children of mothers with hair mercury concentrations higher than 10 µg/g experienced delays of as much as 10% in auditory and visual latencies. Says Grandjean, " [Evoked potentials] represent an objective assessment of nervous system function, and they are relatively independent of confounders. They therefore provide support for the observations of neuropsychological deficits previously reported. The clinical implications of these findings, in total, is that children with increased prenatal exposure to methylmercury are likely to suffer delays in neurological development. " In Grandjean's opinion, two primary points emerge from the Faroe Islands and Madeira findings. " First, " he says, " the evidence is accumulating that prenatal methylmercury exposure from seafood may cause subtle neurotoxicity even though current exposure limits are not exceeded. Second, " he continues, " the effects on brain function should not be looked at in isolation, as the autonomic nervous system may also be involved, thereby affecting cardiovascular function. " >> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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