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Pesticides Exp : Effects of prenatal exposure to pesticides
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 Message 1 of 3 in Discussion 
From: Rene  (Original Message)Sent: 9/15/2006 12:08 AM


Effects of prenatal exposure to pesticides


Medical Studies/Trials
Published: Thursday, 9-Mar-2006 
    
 
Children in Ecuador whose mothers were exposed to pesticides while pregnant had increased blood pressure and diminished ability to copy geometric figures as compared to a control group, according to an epidemiological study in the March issue of Pediatrics.

 
The results appear to be independent of current exposure to the chemicals. The mothers themselves were reported to be healthy.

A team of researchers led by Philippe Grandjean, adjunct professor in the Department of Environmental Health at HSPH, analyzed data on 72 children aged seven or eight years old in the rural Tabacundo-Cayambe area in Northern Ecuador. The children were examined by a physician and were given a battery of standardized tests for neurobehavioral functions. Thirty-seven of the children had mothers whose self-described occupational histories indicated that the women had been exposed to pesticides during pregnancy, typically by working in greenhouses. Dose-response relationships and the exact timing of the exposures' impact were not established due to the nature of the study design.

In the exposed children, the average systolic blood pressure was higher than in those who were unexposed (104.0 mm Hg versus 99.4 mm Hg). An increase in diastolic pressure was not statistically significant. Hypertension among children and adolescents is defined based on a range of blood pressures in healthy children, and children above the 95th percentile are considered hypertensive. In the Pediatrics study, nine children exceeded the approximate 95th percentile of 113 mm Hg. Seven of those children had prenatal pesticide exposure.

Prenatal pesticide exposure was also associated with a decreased ability to copy figures presented to the children as part of a standardized Stanford-Binet test. Adjusted regression analysis indicated that the exposed children experienced a developmental delay on this aptitude of four years. The authors noted that the confidence interval, or range of value, for this coefficient was relatively wide but was a statistically significant finding in a study of limited size, suggesting that the effect could be substantial.

In the part of Ecuador in which the children live, malnourishment is frequent. The authors used delayed growth, or stunting, to explore the role of nutrients in the study's results. Stunting is viewed as an indicator of malnutrition and is defined according to a height-for-age scale. Stunting was associated with decreased copying ability in both exposed and non-exposed children. The researchers found that stunting had no clear effect on blood pressure. They therefore concluded that prenatal pesticide exposure may add to the already deleterious effects of malnutrition.

Current pesticide exposure was measured by excretion of pesticide metabolites in urine and was associated with increased reaction time, one of the standardized tests given for neurobehavioral function, indicating that current and prenatal exposures result in different outcomes. Effects caused by exposure in utero may last into childhood.

"These results suggest that more attention should be paid to protecting the developing brain and that we should seriously consider adopting and enforcing a greater margin of safety in protecting both fetuses and children from potential toxic exposures," said Grandjean.

http://www.hsph.harvard.edu
 
 
From:  
http://www.news-medical.net/?id=16508

 


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 Message 2 of 3 in Discussion 
From: ReneSent: 6/3/2007 10:07 PM
 

Miscarriage:  Research update

 

Health News
Provided by: CANOE,  Apr. 2, 2002

 

Miscarriage -- the spontaneous death of a baby before the 20th week of pregnancy--occurs in approximately 15% to 20% of confirmed pregnancies. That means that approximately 250 Canadian couples experience the heartbreak of losing a baby through miscarriage each day.

While there's still much that isn't known about the causes and treatment of miscarriage, there have been some significant breakthroughs on the research front in recent years. Slowly but surely, medical researchers are beginning to fit the pieces of the miscarriage puzzle together. Here is a quick summary of some of the more recent findings.

Alcohol may play a key role in early miscarriage. A seven-year study involving 25,000 women in Denmark revealed that women who consume five servings of alcohol each week increase their risk of miscarriage by 3.7 times. The researchers suspect that alcohol may be responsible for causing chromosomal defects in the developing baby and/or for triggering the release of prostaglandins (hormones that cause the uterus to contract). The takeaway message is obvious: alcohol and babies don't mix.

Folic acid may help to prevent miscarriages. The role of folic acid in helping to prevent open neural tube defects is well established, but a recent study in The Netherlands suggests that folic acid (the synthetic form of the naturally occurring B-vitamin folate) may also help to reduce the risk of early miscarriage. Researchers found that women with lower amounts of folate in their blood were more likely to have experienced recurrent miscarriages than women with higher concentrates of folate.

Pesticide exposure may be associated with an increased risk of miscarriage. According to a recent study at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, exposure to agricultural pesticides may increase the risk of miscarriage. They found that mothers who lived near crops where certain types of pesticides were used were 40% to 120% more likely to experience miscarriage than women who were not exposed to the same pesticides.

Pregnant women with eating disorders face an increased risk of miscarriage. Two recent studies have indicated that women with anorexia or bulimia face an increased risk of miscarriage, possibly because their health has been compromised because of their eating disorder and/or because their bodies are lacking the nutrients needed to sustain a healthy pregnancy. And, what's more, the authors of a recent clinical commentary in Obsetrics and Gynecology concluded that health care providers need to be more vigilant in screening pregnant women for eating disorders.

Women with an underactive thyroid face an increased risk of miscarriage. A study published in the Journal of Medical Screening found that pregnant women with a medical condition known as hypothyroidism (underactive thyroid) have a four-times greater risk of experiencing a second-trimester miscarriage than pregnant women who do not have this particular disorder.

Women who experience miscarriage are at risk of developing post-traumatic stress disorder. According to a group of researchers at the U.S. Army Soldier Support Institute in Fort Jackson, South Carolina, approximately 1% of women who miscarry exhibit the classic symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder a month after experiencing their miscarriage. Such symptoms include emotional numbness, feeling dazed and confused, experiencing "flashbacks" about the traumatic event, restlessness, difficulty sleeping, and difficulty functioning at home or at work.

The researchers concluded that some women may require treatment for post-traumatic stress syndrome in order to come to terms with their miscarriage. While this study didn't focus on the causes and treatment of miscarriage, it represents a significant research breakthrough nonetheless: it's one of the first studies to seriously examine the psychological fallout of miscarriage. 

 
The contents of this site are for informational purposes only. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified healthcare provider regarding any questions you may have about a medical condition.

© 1996 - 2007 MediResource Inc. - MediResource reaches millions of Canadians each year.


Reply
 Message 3 of 3 in Discussion 
From: ReneSent: 6/3/2007 10:21 PM

 

Pesticides, Fertilizers Linked to U.S. Premature Births

INDIANAPOLIS, Indiana, May 7, 2007 (ENS) - The rising premature birth rate in the United States is associated with increased use of pesticides and fertilizers containing nitrates, according to research by a professor of clinical pediatrics at the Indiana University School of Medicine.

Paul Winchester, MD, reports his findings today at the Pediatric Academic Societies' annual meeting in Toronto, Canada, a combined gathering of the American Pediatric Society, the Society for Pediatric Research, the Ambulatory Pediatric Association, and the American Academy of Pediatrics.

"A growing body of evidence suggests that the consequence of prenatal exposure to pesticides and nitrates as well as to other environmental contaminants is detrimental to many outcomes of pregnancy. As a neonatologist, I am seeing a growing number of birth defects, and preterm births, and I think we need to face up to environmental causes," said Dr. Winchester.

A premature baby is born before the 37th week of pregnancy. Premature birth occurs in between eight to 10 percent of all pregnancies in the United States.

The rate of premature birth in the United States has risen about 30 percent between 1981, when the government began tracking premature births, and 2005, according to the National Center for Health Statistics, a division of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The prematurity rate was 9.4 in 1981; it has increased every year since then except for slight dips in 1992 and 2000.

Winchester and his colleagues found that preterm birth rates peaked when pesticides and nitrates measurements in surface water were highest, from April through July, and were lowest when nitrates and pesticides were lowest, in August and September.

More than 27 million U.S. live births were studied from 1996-2002. Preterm birth varied from a high of 12.03 percent in June to a low of 10.44 percent in September.

The highest rate of prematurity, 11.91 percent, occurred in May and June and the lowest, 10.79 percent in August and September. These results were independent of maternal age, race, education, marital status, alcohol or cigarette use, or whether the mother was an urban, suburban or rural resident.

Pesticide and nitrate levels in surface water were also highest in May-June and lowest in August and September, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

"Preterm births in the United States vary month to month in a recurrent and seasonal manner. Pesticides and nitrates similarly vary seasonally in surface water throughout the U.S. Nitrates and pesticides can disrupt endocrine hormones and nitric oxide pathways in the developing fetus," Winchester said.

Because they are born too early, premature babies weigh much less than full-term babies. They may have health problems because their organs did not have enough time to develop and need special medical care in a neonatal intensive care unit, where they stay until their organ systems can work on their own.

"I believe this work may lay the foundation for some of the most important basic and clinical research, and public health initiatives of our time," said James Lemons, MD, professor of pediatrics at the IU School of Medicine.

Dr. Lemons is director of the section of neonatal-perinatal medicine at the IU School of Medicine and heads the Riley Hospital for Children of Clarian Health's section of neonatal-perinatal medicine.

"To recognize that what we put into our environment has potential pandemic effects on pregnancy outcome and possibly on child development is a momentous observation, which hopefully will help transform the way humanity cares for its world," Lemons said.

In young infants, ingestion of nitrates, components of fertilizers that are often washed into surface water and groundwater, can reduce the blood’s ability to carry oxygen.

The association between nitrate-contaminated well water and inability of the blood to carry oxygen was first described by Hunter Comly, an Iowa City physician during the early 1940s.

In 1974, the Safe Drinking Water Act set a maximum contaminant concentration for nitrates of 10-milligram per liter for public water supplies, but it does not apply to private wells.

In a 1994 survey of 5,500 private water supplies in nine Midwestern states, 13 percent of the wells were found to have nitrate concentrations greater than the standard.

The state of Wisconsin is well aware of the problems nitrates in drinking water can cause for premature babies, especially in rural areas. In 2006, the state Department of Natural Resources, DNR, issued a warning that nitrates that are washed into groundwater from fertilizer can be dangerous to infants, and especially to premature infants.

"All infants less than six months of age are at risk of nitrate toxicity, but premature babies and babies with other health problems are more sensitive than healthy infants," the DNR said.

Well owners are advised that the only way to know if their drinking water contains nitrate is to have a water sample tested by a certified laboratory. Testing is recommended for well water used by pregnant women and is "essential for a well that serves infants under six months of age," the DNR says. The DNR provides a list of certified labs online at: dnr.wi.gov/ org/es/science/lc.

The state of Indiana Department of Natural Resources does not address this issue.

For the past four years, Winchester and colleagues have focused attention on the outcomes of pregnancy in Indiana and the United States in relation to environmental pesticides and nitrates in surface and drinking water.

Last year at the Pediatric Academic Societies' annual meeting, Dr. Winchester reported that birth defects peak in Indiana and in the United States as a whole during April through July, the same months as pesticides and nitrates reach their maximum concentrations in surface water. This year's presentation expands upon that work.

Collaborating with Dr. Winchester on this study were Akosua Boadiwaa Adu-Boahene and Sarah Kosten of the IU School of Medicine, Alex Williamson of the U.S. Geological Survey, and Ying Jun, PhD of the University of Cincinnati.

The work was funded by the Division of Neonatology, Department of Pediatrics of the IU School of Medicine.

[http://www.ens-newswire.com]