Mercury Transfer During Pregnancy and Breastfeeding: Hair Mercury Concentrations as Biomarker

Hair mercury (HHg) concentration is a biomarker of exposure that is widely used to assess environmental contamination by fish methylmercury and neurodevelopment in children. In the Rio Madeira basin (Brazilian Amazon), total HHg concentrations in 649 mother–infant pairs were measured at birth (prena...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biological trace element research 2013-09, Vol.154 (3), p.326-332
Hauptverfasser: Marques, Rejane C., Bernardi, José V. E., Dórea, José G., Leão, Renata S., Malm, Olaf
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Hair mercury (HHg) concentration is a biomarker of exposure that is widely used to assess environmental contamination by fish methylmercury and neurodevelopment in children. In the Rio Madeira basin (Brazilian Amazon), total HHg concentrations in 649 mother–infant pairs were measured at birth (prenatal exposure) and after 6 months of exclusive breastfeeding; these mother–infant pairs were from high fish-eating communities (urban, n  = 232; rural, n  = 35; and Riverine, n  = 262) and low fish-eating tin-miner settlers ( n  = 120). Differences in kinetics were seen between Hg exposure from fish consumption and environmental exposure to a tin-ore mining environment. Overall maternal HHg concentrations (at childbirth and after 6 months of lactation) were higher than those of infant HHg. However, the relative change in HHg after 6 months of lactation showed that mothers decreased HHg while infants increased HHg. The relative change showed a consistently higher increase for girls than boys with a statistical significance only in high fish-eating mothers. The correlation coefficients between maternal and newborn hair were high and statistically significant for mothers living in urban ( r  = 0.66, p  
ISSN:0163-4984
1559-0720
DOI:10.1007/s12011-013-9743-3