Pluim H J, Koppe J G, Olie K, van der Slikke J W, Slot P C, van Boxtel C J
Department of Neonatology, Medical Faculty of the University of Amsterdam, Graduate School for Neurosciences, The Netherlands.
Acta Paediatr. 1994 Jun;83(6):583-7. doi: 10.1111/j.1651-2227.1994.tb13086.x.
The effects of exposure to low levels of dioxins in infants (intrauterine and via breast milk) were studied. In a group of 35 babies, specially selected, laboratory tests were performed in cord blood and in blood sampled at 7 days and 11 weeks of age. The outcome of these laboratory tests was related to dioxin concentrations in milk fat and cumulative dioxin intake. At 11 weeks of age, alanine aminotransferase and aspartate aminotransferase activities in plasma were significantly related to cumulative dioxin intake. A significant negative relation was found between platelet count and cumulative dioxin intake. The results of this study suggest that exposure to background levels of dioxins, both intrauterine and via breast milk, may have effects in newborns.