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Methylmercury plus Ethanol Exposure: How Much Does This Combination Affect Emotionality?

Diandra Araújo LuzSabrina de Carvalho CartágenesCinthia Cristina Sousa de Menezes da SilveiraBruno Gonçalves PinheiroKissila Márvia Matias Machado FerraroLuanna de Melo Pereira FernandesEnéas Andrade Fontes-JúniorCristiane do Socorro Ferraz Maia
Published in: International journal of molecular sciences (2021)
Mercury is a heavy metal found in organic and inorganic forms that represents an important toxicant with impact on human health. Mercury can be released in the environment by natural phenoms (i.e., volcanic eruptions), industrial products, waste, or anthropogenic actions (i.e., mining activity). Evidence has pointed to mercury exposure inducing neurological damages related to emotional disturbance, such as anxiety, depression, and insomnia. The mechanisms that underlie these emotional disorders remain poorly understood, although an important role of glutamatergic pathways, alterations in HPA axis, and disturbance in activity of monoamines have been suggested. Ethanol (EtOH) is a psychoactive substance consumed worldwide that induces emotional alterations that have been strongly investigated, and shares common pathophysiological mechanisms with mercury. Concomitant mercury and EtOH intoxication occur in several regions of the world, specially by communities that consume seafood and fish as the principal product of nutrition (i.e., Amazon region). Such affront appears to be more deleterious in critical periods of life, such as the prenatal and adolescence period. Thus, this review aimed to discuss the cellular and behavioral changes displayed by the mercury plus EtOH exposure during adolescence, focused on emotional disorders, to answer the question of whether mercury plus EtOH exposure intensifies depression, anxiety, and insomnia observed by the toxicants in isolation.
Keyphrases
  • sleep quality
  • heavy metals
  • depressive symptoms
  • human health
  • risk assessment
  • pregnant women
  • climate change
  • brain injury
  • mass spectrometry
  • health risk
  • life cycle