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Characterization of trace elements exposure in pregnant women in the United States, NHANES 1999–2016.
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4 2020
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Source: Environ Res. 183:109208
Details:
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Alternative Title:Environ Res
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Personal Author:
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Description:Objective:
The objective of the current study is to report on urine, blood and serum metal concentrations to characterize exposures to trace elements and micronutrient levels in both pregnant women and women of child-bearing age in the U.S. National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) years 1999–2016.
Methods:
Urine and blood samples taken from NHANES participants were analyzed for thirteen urine metals, three blood metals, three serum metals, speciated mercury in blood and speciated arsenic in urine. Adjusted and unadjusted least squares geometric means and 95% confidence intervals were calculated for all participants among women aged 15–44 years. Changes in exposure levels over time were also examined. Serum cotinine levels were used to adjust for smoke exposure, as smoking is a source of metal exposure.
Results:
Detection rates for four urine metals from the ATSDR Substance Priority List: arsenic, lead, mercury and cadmium were ~83–99% for both pregnant and nonpregnant women of child bearing age. A majority of metal concentrations were higher in pregnant women compared to non-pregnant women. Pregnant women had higher mean urine total arsenic, urine mercury, and urine lead; however, blood lead and mercury were higher in non-pregnant women. Blood lead, cadmium, mercury, as well as urine antimony, cadmium and lead in women of childbearing age decreased over time, while urine cobalt increased over time.
Conclusions:
Pregnant women in the US have been exposed to several trace metals, with observed concentrations for some trace elements decreasing since 1999.
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Pubmed ID:32058143
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Pubmed Central ID:PMC8243358
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