秘鲁母乳喂养双亲中母奶和儿童血液中的铅和砷浓度。

IF 2.1 4区 医学 Q2 NURSING Journal of Human Lactation Pub Date : 2024-02-01 Epub Date: 2023-12-12 DOI:10.1177/08903344231212430
Ana Maria Linares, Amanda Thaxton-Wiggins, Jason M Unrine
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:研究目的:确定秘鲁母亲乳汁中有毒微量元素(铅和砷)的浓度及其与 3-20 个月大婴儿血液中浓度的关系:这项探索性横断面研究在秘鲁进行,包括母乳喂养的母婴二人组(N = 40)。按照标准化方案,采集了母乳和婴儿血液的生物样本:73%和100%的样本中牛奶中的铅和砷浓度高于方法检测限,中位浓度分别为 0.26 µg/L (IQR = 0.10, 0.33 µg/L) 和 0.73 µg/L (IQR = 0.63, 0.91 µg/L)。血液中的铅和砷浓度分别为 2.05 微克/分升(标准差 = 1.35)和 1.43 微克/分升(几何平均数:标准差 = 1.39)。12.5%(n = 5)样本的血铅浓度高于美国疾病控制和预防中心的参考值(< 3.5 µg/dl),超过一半的砷浓度高于< 1.3 µg/dl的可接受水平(梅奥诊所解释手册)。我们的研究结果表明,年龄每增加一个月,血液中的铅浓度就会增加 0.1 µg/dl(p = 0.023)。此外,母亲乳汁中的砷浓度每增加 1 微克/升,儿童血液中的砷浓度就会增加 1.40 微克/分升:秘鲁和全世界都需要采取有效的干预措施来减少育龄妇女接触有毒物质的机会。
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Concentrations of Lead and Arsenic in Mother's Milk and Children's Blood in Peruvian Breastfeeding Dyads.

Background: Toxic trace elements could enter human milk through mothers' food consumption, drinking water, air, or incidental soil ingestion, and are of concern to the nursing infant.

Research aim: To determine the concentration of toxic trace elements (lead and arsenic) in Peruvian mothers' milk and their association with blood concentrations in their own infants 3-20 months old.

Method: This exploratory, cross-sectional study, carried out in Peru, included breastfeeding mother/child dyads (N = 40). Following standardized protocols, biospecimens of human milk and child's blood were collected.

Results: Lead and arsenic concentrations in milk were above the method detection limits in 73% and 100% of samples with median concentrations of 0.26 µg/L (IQR = 0.10, 0.33 µg/L) and 0.73 µg/L (IQR = 0.63, 0.91 µg/L), respectively. Concentrations of lead and arsenic in blood were 2.05 µg/dL (SD = 1.35), and 1.43 µg/dl (geometric mean: SD = 1.39), respectively. Blood lead concentrations in 12.5% (n = 5) of the samples were above the U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention reference value (< 3.5 µg/dl), and over half of arsenic concentrations were above the acceptable levels of < 1.3 µg/dl (Mayo Clinic Interpretative Handbook). Our results showed that for every one-month increase in age, lead blood concentrations increased by 0.1 µg/dl (p = 0.023). Additionally, every 1 µg/L increase in the mother's milk arsenic was associated with a 1.40 µg/dl increase in the child's blood arsenic concentration.

Conclusions: Implementing effective interventions to decrease the toxic exposure of reproductive-aged women is needed in Peru and worldwide.

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来源期刊
Journal of Human Lactation
Journal of Human Lactation 医学-妇产科学
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
11.50%
发文量
100
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Committed to the promotion of diversity and equity in all our policies and practices, our aims are: To provide our readers and the international communities of clinicians, educators and scholars working in the field of lactation with current and quality-based evidence, from a broad array of disciplines, including the medical sciences, basic sciences, social sciences and the humanities. To provide student and novice researchers, as well as, researchers whose native language is not English, with expert editorial guidance while preparing their work for publication in JHL. In each issue, the Journal of Human Lactation publishes original research, original theoretical and conceptual articles, discussions of policy and practice issues, and the following special features: Advocacy: A column that discusses a ‘hot’ topic in lactation advocacy About Research: A column focused on an in-depth discussion of a different research topic each issue Lactation Newsmakers: An interview with a widely-recognized outstanding expert in the field from around the globe Research Commentary: A brief discussion of the issues raised in a specific research article published in the current issue Book review(s): Reviews written by content experts about relevant new publications International News Briefs: From major international lactation organizations.
期刊最新文献
Documenting Our History. Response to Letter to the Editor. Trajectories of Breastfeeding-Related Thoughts and Attitudes Among Low-Income Smoke-Exposed Pregnant Women: A Latent Class Growth Analysis. Barriers and Facilitators in Lactation Support for the Preterm Mother-Infant Dyad: An Integrated Approach.
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