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镉、铅和汞在不吸烟孕妇中的暴露情况。

Cadmium, lead and mercury exposure in non smoking pregnant women.

机构信息

Centre for Ecosystem Management, Edith Cowan University, 270 Joondalup Drive, Joondalup, WA 6027, Australia.

出版信息

Environ Res. 2013 Oct;126:118-24. doi: 10.1016/j.envres.2013.07.005. Epub 2013 Jul 25.

Abstract

Recent literature suggests that exposure to low concentrations of heavy metals may affect both maternal and child health. This study aimed to determine the biological heavy metals concentrations of pregnant women as well as environmental and dietary factors that may influence exposure concentrations. One hundred and seventy three pregnant women were recruited from Western Australia, each providing a sample of blood, first morning void urine, residential soil, dust and drinking water samples. Participants also completed a questionnaire which included a food frequency component. All biological and environmental samples were analysed for heavy metals using ICP-MS. Biological and environmental concentrations of lead and mercury were generally low (Median Pb Drinking Water (DW) 0.04 µg/L; Pb soil <3.0 µg/g; Pb dust 16.5 µg/g; Pb blood 3.67 µg/L; Pb urine 0.55; µg/L Hg DW <0.03; Hg soil <1.0 µg/g; Hg dust <1.0 µg/g; Hg blood 0.46 µg/L; Hg urine <0.40 µg/L). Cadmium concentrations were low in environmental samples (Median CdDW 0.02 µg/L; Cdsoil <0.30 ug/g; Cddust <0.30) but elevated in urine samples (Median 0.55 µg/L, creatinine corrected 0.70 µg/g (range <0.2-7.06 µg/g creatinine) compared with other studies of pregnant women. Predictors of increased biological metals concentrations in regression models for blood cadmium were residing in the Great Southern region of Western Australia and not using iron/folic acid supplements and for urinary cadmium was having lower household annual income. However, these factors explained little of the variation in respective biological metals concentrations. The importance of establishing factors that influence low human exposure concentrations is becoming critical in efforts to reduce exposures and hence the potential for adverse health effects.

摘要

近期文献表明,接触低浓度重金属可能会影响母婴健康。本研究旨在确定孕妇的生物重金属浓度以及可能影响暴露浓度的环境和饮食因素。从西澳大利亚招募了 173 名孕妇,每位孕妇提供一份血液、第一次晨尿、居住土壤、灰尘和饮用水样本。参与者还完成了一份包含食物频率成分的问卷。所有生物和环境样本均使用 ICP-MS 分析重金属。生物和环境中的铅和汞浓度通常较低(饮用水(DW)中 Pb 的中位数为 0.04 µg/L;土壤中 Pb<3.0 µg/g;灰尘中 Pb 为 16.5 µg/g;血液中 Pb 为 3.67 µg/L;尿液中 Pb 为 0.55 µg/L;HgDW<0.03;土壤中 Hg<1.0 µg/g;灰尘中 Hg<1.0 µg/g;血液中 Hg 为 0.46 µg/L;尿液中 Hg<0.40 µg/L)。环境样本中的镉浓度较低(DW 中 Cd 的中位数为 0.02 µg/L;土壤中 Cd<0.30 ug/g;灰尘中 Cd<0.30),但尿液样本中的镉浓度较高(中位数为 0.55 µg/L,经肌酐校正后为 0.70 µg/g(范围为 0.2-7.06 µg/g 肌酐),与其他孕妇研究相比。回归模型中血液镉浓度升高的预测因子是居住在西澳大利亚大南部地区和不使用铁/叶酸补充剂,尿液镉浓度升高的预测因子是家庭年收入较低。然而,这些因素仅能解释各自生物金属浓度变化的一小部分。确定影响人类低暴露浓度的因素的重要性在降低暴露水平从而降低潜在健康影响的努力中变得至关重要。

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