The relationship between lead levels and reading acquisition in Spanish speakers, evidence from Uruguayan schoolers

IF 3.4 3区 医学 Q2 NEUROSCIENCES Neurotoxicology Pub Date : 2024-11-10 DOI:10.1016/j.neuro.2024.10.011
Natalia Agudelo , Ariel Cuadro , Gabriel Barg , Elena I. Queirolo , Nelly Mañay , Katarzyna Kordas
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Abstract

Lead is a well-known neurotoxicant that continues to affect children´s cognition and behavior. Nevertheless, we still have little evidence on the consequences of lead exposure on reading abilities, particularly in languages other than English.

Objective

To investigate the cross-sectional association between blood lead levels (BLL), and pre-reading and reading abilities in first-grade children from Montevideo, Uruguay.

Method

Of 357 school children (age 67–105 months) enrolled into the study, 287(43 % girls) had a BLL measure and an assessment of pre-reading and reading abilities based on five tests (Verbal comprehension, Sound blending, Letter word identification, Sentence reading fluency, and Passage comprehension) from the Batería III Woodcock-Muñoz. Separate generalized linear models (GLM) were conducted on the relationship between BLL and each test score separately, adjusting for sex, maternal education, household assets, Home Observation for Measurement of the Environment Inventory score, season, test administrator, blood lead testing method, and school clusters.

Results

The mean BLL was 4.0 ± 2.2 µg/dL, with no differences between the sexes. BLL was associated with a poorer vocabulary knowledge (β [95 % CI]): −0.20 [-0.39, 0.01]. For all the tests, children with BLLs ≥5 µg/dL tended to exhibit poorer performance than children with lower BLLs, but these associations were not statistically significant. When stratified by sex, some evidence of differential associations between BLLs and reading abilities emerged: BLLs were associated with higher phonological awareness in girls (0.32 [0.15, 0.48]) but not boys, and with lower reading comprehension in boys (-0.54 [-1.20, 0.13]) but not girls. Also, lead exposure (BLL ≥ 5 µg/dL) was more strongly and negatively associated with phonological awareness (-1.22 [-1.57, −0.86]) in boys than girls.

Conclusion

In this study of first-grade children learning to read in Spanish, we found an inverse association between lead exposure and vocabulary scores, as well as tendency toward lower performance on pre-reading and reading measures among children with BLLs ≥5 µg/dL. Pre-reading and reading abilities are relevant to literacy acquisition; further research is required to confirm these links in larger studies, and to investigate differences between boys and girls, and according to key sociodemographic characteristics.
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铅水平与西班牙语学习者阅读能力之间的关系,来自乌拉圭学生的证据。
铅是一种众所周知的神经毒物,会持续影响儿童的认知和行为。然而,关于铅暴露对阅读能力的影响,尤其是对英语以外的语言的影响,我们仍然缺乏证据:调查乌拉圭蒙得维的亚一年级儿童血液中铅含量(BLL)与阅读前和阅读能力之间的横向联系:在参加研究的 357 名学龄儿童(年龄为 67-105 个月)中,有 287 名(43% 为女孩)接受了血铅含量测量,并根据 Batería III Woodcock-Muñoz 的五项测试(言语理解、声音混合、字母单词识别、句子阅读流利性和段落理解)对学前阅读和阅读能力进行了评估。在对性别、母亲教育程度、家庭资产、家庭环境测量观察清单得分、季节、测试管理者、血铅测试方法和学校分组进行调整后,分别对 BLL 与各测试得分之间的关系进行了广义线性模型(GLM)分析:平均血铅含量为 4.0 ± 2.2µg/dL ,男女之间无差异。血铅含量与较差的词汇知识相关(β [95% CI]):-0.20 [-0.39, 0.01].在所有测试中,BLL值≥5µg/dL的儿童往往比BLL值较低的儿童表现得更差,但这些关联在统计学上并不显著。按性别分层后,有证据表明 BLLs 与阅读能力之间存在差异:铅中浓度与女孩(0.32 [0.15, 0.48])而非男孩(0.32 [0.15, 0.48])较高的语音意识相关,与男孩(-0.54 [-1.20, 0.13])而非女孩(-0.54 [-1.20, 0.13])较低的阅读理解能力相关。此外,铅暴露(BLL ≥ 5µg/dL)与语音意识的负相关(-1.22 [-1.57, -0.86])在男孩中比在女孩中更强:在这项针对学习西班牙语阅读的一年级儿童的研究中,我们发现铅暴露量与词汇量得分之间存在反向关系,而且铅含量≥5µg/dL的儿童在阅读前和阅读能力方面的表现趋于低下。预读和阅读能力与识字能力的获得息息相关;需要进一步研究,以便在更大规模的研究中证实这些联系,并调查男孩和女孩之间的差异,以及主要社会人口特征的差异。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Neurotoxicology
Neurotoxicology 医学-毒理学
CiteScore
6.80
自引率
5.90%
发文量
161
审稿时长
70 days
期刊介绍: NeuroToxicology specializes in publishing the best peer-reviewed original research papers dealing with the effects of toxic substances on the nervous system of humans and experimental animals of all ages. The Journal emphasizes papers dealing with the neurotoxic effects of environmentally significant chemical hazards, manufactured drugs and naturally occurring compounds.
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