Stewart Paul W, Sargent David M, Reihman Jacqueline, Gump Brooks B, Lonky Edward, Darvill Thomas, Hicks Heraline, Pagano James
Department of Psychology, State University of New York at Oswego, Oswego, New York 13126, USA.
Environ Health Perspect. 2006 Dec;114(12):1923-9. doi: 10.1289/ehp.9216.
Animal studies have shown that exposure to common, low-level environmental contaminants [e.g., polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), lead] causes excessive and inappropriate responding on intermittent reinforcement schedules. The Differential Reinforcement of Low Rates task (DRL) has been shown to be especially sensitive to low-level PCB exposure in monkeys.
We investigated the relationships between prenatal PCB and postnatal Pb exposure performance on a DRL schedule in children. We predicted that a) prenatal PCB exposure would reduce interresponse times (IRTs) and reinforcements earned, and b) postnatal Pb exposure would reduce IRTs and reinforcements earned.
We tested 167 children on a DRL20 (20 sec) reinforcement schedule, and recorded IRTs and the number of reinforced responses across the session. We measured prenatal PCB exposure (cord blood), methylmercury (MeHg) (maternal hair), and postnatal Pb exposure (venous blood), and > 50 potentially confounding variables.
Results indicated impaired performance in children exposed to PCBs, MeHg, and Pb. Children prenatally exposed to PCBs responded excessively, with significantly lower IRTs and fewer reinforcers earned across the session. In addition, exposure to either MeHg or Pb predicted statistically significant impairments of a similar magnitude to those for PCBs, and the associated impairments of all three contaminants (PCB, MeHg, and Pb) were statistically independent of one another.
These results, taken with animal literature, argue the high sensitivity of DRL performance to low-level PCB, MeHg, and Pb exposure. Future research should employ behavioral tasks in children, such as DRL, that have been demonstrably sensitive to low-level PCB, MeHg, and Pb exposure in animals.
动物研究表明,暴露于常见的低水平环境污染物[如多氯联苯(PCBs)、铅]会导致在间歇强化程序中出现过度和不适当的反应。低反应率差异强化任务(DRL)已被证明对猴子低水平的多氯联苯暴露特别敏感。
我们研究了儿童在DRL程序中,产前多氯联苯暴露与产后铅暴露之间的关系与行为表现。我们预测:a)产前多氯联苯暴露会减少反应间隔时间(IRT)和获得的强化物数量;b)产后铅暴露会减少反应间隔时间和获得的强化物数量。
我们在DRL20(20秒)强化程序中测试了167名儿童,并记录了整个测试过程中的反应间隔时间和强化反应的数量。我们测量了产前多氯联苯暴露(脐带血)、甲基汞(MeHg)(母亲头发)和产后铅暴露(静脉血),以及超过50个潜在的混杂变量。
结果表明,暴露于多氯联苯、甲基汞和铅的儿童表现受损。产前暴露于多氯联苯中的儿童反应过度,整个测试过程中的反应间隔时间显著缩短,获得的强化物数量减少。此外,甲基汞或铅的暴露在统计学上预测了与多氯联苯类似程度且具有统计学意义的损伤,并且这三种污染物(多氯联苯、甲基汞和铅)造成的相关损伤在统计学上相互独立存在。
这些结果与动物研究文献相结合,表明DRL表现对低水平的多氯联苯、甲基汞和铅暴露具有高度敏感性。未来的研究应该采用对动物低水平多氯联苯、甲基汞和铅暴露具有明显敏感性的儿童行为任务,如DRL任务进行研究。