Publication | Open Access
Organophosphate Pesticide Exposure and Neurobehavioral Performance in Agricultural and Nonagricultural Hispanic Workers
189
Citations
40
References
2006
Year
Pesticide-residue AnalysisHispanic Immigrant FarmworkersEnvironmental ExposureEnvironmental HealthToxicologyNonagricultural Hispanic WorkersInsecticidePublic HealthHuman BiomonitoringEnvironmental Dust SamplesPsychiatryNeurobehavioral PerformanceOrganophosphate Pesticide ExposureHuman ExposurePest ManagementPesticide ExposureOccupational ToxicologyForensic ToxicologyEnvironmental ToxicologyMedicine
Our understanding of the health risks of farmworkers exposed to pesticides in their work and home environments is rapidly increasing, although studies designed to examine the possible neurobehavioral effects of low-level chronic pesticide exposure are limited. We measured dialkyl phosphate urinary metabolite levels, collected environmental dust samples from a subset of homes, obtained information on work practices, and conducted neurobehavioral tests on a sample of farmworkers in Oregon. Significant correlations between urinary methyl metabolite levels and total methyl organophosphate (azinphos-methyl, phosmet, malathion) house dust levels were observed. We found the neurobehavioral performance of Hispanic immigrant farmworkers to be lower than that observed in a nonagricultural Hispanic immigrant population, and within the sample of agricultural workers there was a positive correlation between urinary organophosphate metabolite levels and poorer performance on some neurobehavioral tests. These findings add to an increasing body of evidence of the association between low levels of pesticide exposure and deficits in neurobehavioral performance.
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