Publication | Closed Access
Impact of Maternal Seafood Diet on Fetal Exposure to Mercury, Selenium, and Lead
359
Citations
32
References
1992
Year
NutritionDietary ExposureFetal HealthFaroe IslandsBlood SeleniumLead PoisoningAquacultureEnvironmental HealthMercury BiogeochemistryToxicologyMaternal NutritionPublic HealthMaternal Seafood DietSelenium DeficiencyDevelopmental ToxicologyMaternal HealthMaternal-fetal MedicineWhale MeatMercury ChemistryPregnancy NutritionFood SafetyFetal ExposurePhysiologyForensic ToxicologyPediatricsMetal ToxicityEnvironmental ToxicologyMedicine
Umbilical cord blood from 1,023 consecutive births in the Faroe Islands showed a median blood-mercury concentration of 121 nmol/l (24.2 micrograms/l); 250 of those samples (25.1%) had blood-mercury concentrations that exceeded 200 nmol/l (40 micrograms/l). Maternal hair mercury concentrations showed a median of 22.5 nmol/g (4.5 micrograms/g), and 130 samples (12.7%) contained concentrations that exceeded 50 nmol/g (10 micrograms/g). Frequent ingestion of whale meat dinners during pregnancy and, to a much lesser degree, frequent consumption of fish, and increased parity or age were associated with high mercury concentrations in cord blood and hair. Blood-mercury levels were slightly lower if the mother had occasionally ingested alcoholic beverages. Mercury in blood correlated moderately with blood selenium (median, 1.40 mumol/l). Increased selenium concentrations were associated with intake of whale meat, alcohol abstention, delivery after term, and high parity. Lead in cord blood was low (median, 82 nmol/l), particularly if the mothers had frequently had fish for dinner and had abstained from smoking.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1