Environmental contaminants and child's growth.
M KadawathagedaraB de Lauzon-GuillainJérémie BottonPublished in: Journal of developmental origins of health and disease (2019)
Experimental data have suggested that some contaminants in the environment may increase the risk of obesity. Infants can be exposed to chemicals either prenatally, by trans-placental passage of chemicals, or postnatally by their own diet and by other external pathways (air inhalation, dust, hand-to-mouth exposure) after birth. To provide a review of epidemiological evidence on the association between prenatal exposure to chemicals and prenatal and postnatal growth, we present the literature from systematic review articles and international meta-analyses, when available, or recent research articles when summarizing articles were not available. The most studied contaminants in this field were persistent organic pollutants (e.g. organochlorinated pesticides, polychlorinated biphenyls), non-persistent pollutants (e.g. phthalates, bisphenol A), toxic heavy metals (i.e. cadmium, lead and mercury), arsenic, mycotoxins and acrylamide. Mounting evidence suggests that child's growth may be associated with prenatal or postnatal exposures to environmental contaminants. Improving exposure assessment and studying the contaminants as mixtures should allow to gain knowledge about the environmental determinants of growth and obesity.
Keyphrases
- systematic review
- heavy metals
- drinking water
- meta analyses
- pregnant women
- weight loss
- risk assessment
- type diabetes
- human health
- metabolic syndrome
- mental health
- health risk assessment
- insulin resistance
- health risk
- preterm infants
- healthcare
- physical activity
- randomized controlled trial
- adipose tissue
- skeletal muscle
- air pollution
- machine learning
- life cycle