Fingerprinting PCB patterns among Mohawk women

This study examined the association of contaminated fish consumption and polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) body burden by comparing the similarity of the congener pattern in yellow perch, caught near the point source of industrial pollution, and in other local fish to the pattern found in the breast mi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of exposure analysis and environmental epidemiology 2001-05, Vol.11 (3), p.184-192
Hauptverfasser: HWANG, SYNI-AN, YANG, BAO-ZHU, FITZGERALD, EDWARD F, BUSH, BRIAN, COOK, KATSI
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container_issue 3
container_start_page 184
container_title Journal of exposure analysis and environmental epidemiology
container_volume 11
creator HWANG, SYNI-AN
YANG, BAO-ZHU
FITZGERALD, EDWARD F
BUSH, BRIAN
COOK, KATSI
description This study examined the association of contaminated fish consumption and polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) body burden by comparing the similarity of the congener pattern in yellow perch, caught near the point source of industrial pollution, and in other local fish to the pattern found in the breast milk of Mohawk women from Akwesasne, a Native American community located along the St. Lawrence River in New York, Ontario, and Quebec. The similarity is defined by the weighted Euclidean distance between two congener patterns. Ninety-seven Mohawk mothers participated and provided samples of breast milk. One hundred fifty-four nursing women from the Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children (WIC) of Warren and Schoharie counties, New York, who gave birth during the same time period, were used as the comparison group. Results revealed that the breast milk of the Mohawk women, who ate the most local fish, had a congener pattern that more closely resembled that of perch caught near the waste site or average sampled fish caught in the Reserve than Mohawk women who ate less fish or the controls. The outcome demonstrates how PCBs may be “fingerprinted” as they migrate offsite from industrial sources and ultimately result in human exposure.
doi_str_mv 10.1038/sj.jea.7500159
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subjects Animals
Body burden
Breast milk
Breastfeeding & lactation
Case-Control Studies
Congeners
Eating
Epidemiology
Euclidean geometry
Female
Fingerprinting
Fish
Fishes
Food Contamination
Humans
Indians, North American - statistics & numerical data
Industrial pollution
Infants
Maternal Exposure - statistics & numerical data
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Milk, Human - chemistry
Minority & ethnic groups
New York - epidemiology
Nutrition
Ontario - epidemiology
original-article
PCB
Pollution sources
Polychlorinated biphenyls
Polychlorinated Biphenyls - analysis
Pregnancy
Rivers
Similarity
Water Pollutants, Chemical - analysis
title Fingerprinting PCB patterns among Mohawk women
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