Unit of Metals and Health, Institute of Environmental Medicine, Karolinska Institutet, Box 210, 17177 Stockholm, Sweden.
Supervisor Intermedio de Atención Primaria de la Salud, Área Operativa XXIX, Hospital Dr. Nicolás Cayetano Pagano, San Antonio de los Cobres, 4411 Salta, Argentina.
Environ Int. 2015 Apr;77:48-54. doi: 10.1016/j.envint.2015.01.011. Epub 2015 Jan 30.
Lithium, used for treating bipolar disease, crosses freely the placenta and is classified as teratogenic. It is unclear to what extent environmental lithium exposure may affect fetal growth and development.
To elucidate potential effects of lithium exposure through drinking water during pregnancy on fetal size.
We developed a prospective population-based mother-child cohort (N=194) in an area with highly varying drinking water lithium concentrations (5-1600 μg/L) in northern Argentinean Andes. Blood and urinary lithium concentrations (sampled repeatedly during pregnancy) were measured using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry. We measured fetal size by ultrasound in second and third trimesters, and weight, length and head circumference at birth. Multivariable models were used to examine associations between lithium exposure (continuous and in tertiles) and fetal size measures.
Lithium in maternal blood (median 25; range 1.9-145 μg/L) and urine (1645; 105-4600 μg/L) was inversely associated (apparently linearly) with all fetal measures (body, head and femur) in the second trimester, and with birth length (β -0.53 cm per 25 μg/L increase in blood lithium, 95%CI -1.0; -0.052). An increase of 100 μg/L in blood was associated with 2 cm shorter newborns (about one standard deviation).
Lithium exposure through drinking water was associated with impaired fetal size and this seemed to be initiated in early gestation. Further studies are warranted to confirm causality and to understand the mechanisms. If confirmed, these findings have public health relevance and emphasize the need for more data on lithium concentrations in drinking water, including bottled water.
用于治疗双相情感障碍的锂可自由穿过胎盘,被归类为致畸物。目前尚不清楚环境锂暴露在何种程度上可能影响胎儿的生长和发育。
阐明孕妇通过饮用水暴露于锂对胎儿大小的潜在影响。
我们在阿根廷北部安第斯山脉一个饮用水锂浓度(5-1600μg/L)差异很大的地区,开发了一个前瞻性的基于人群的母子队列(N=194)。采用电感耦合等离子体质谱法检测血液和尿液中的锂浓度(在妊娠期间多次重复采样)。我们在妊娠中期和晚期通过超声测量胎儿大小,并在出生时测量体重、长度和头围。使用多变量模型来检查锂暴露(连续和三分位)与胎儿大小测量值之间的关联。
母亲血液(中位数 25;范围 1.9-145μg/L)和尿液(1645;105-4600μg/L)中的锂与胎儿在中期的所有测量值(身体、头部和股骨)呈负相关(似乎呈线性关系),并与出生时的长度呈负相关(血液锂每增加 25μg/L,β值为-0.53cm,95%CI-1.0;-0.052)。血液中增加 100μg/L 与新生儿缩短约 2cm(约一个标准差)有关。
通过饮用水暴露于锂与胎儿大小受损有关,而且这种影响似乎发生在妊娠早期。需要进一步的研究来确认因果关系并了解其机制。如果得到证实,这些发现具有公共卫生意义,并强调需要更多关于饮用水中锂浓度的数据,包括瓶装水。