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Association between Prenatal Exposure to Household Pesticides and Neonatal Weight and Length Growth in the Japan Environment and Children's Study.

Taro MatsukiTakeshi EbaraHazuki TamadaYuki ItoYasuyuki YamadaHirohisa KanoTakahiro KuriharaHirotaka SatoSayaka KatoShinji SaitohMayumi Sugiura-OgasawaraMichihiro Kamijimanull The Japan Environment And Children's Study Jecs Group
Published in: International journal of environmental research and public health (2020)
The effects of prenatal exposure to household pesticides on fetal and neonatal growth have not been fully clarified. The present study aims to determine the effects of prenatal exposure to pesticides on neonates' body size and growth during the first month. This study included 93,718 pairs of pregnant women and their children from the Japan Environment and Children's Study. Participants completed self-reporting questionnaires during their second or third trimesters on their demographic characteristics and frequency of pesticide use during pregnancy. Child weight, length, and sex were obtained from medical record transcripts. Birth weight and length, as well as weight and length changes over the first month, were estimated using an analysis of covariance. Frequency of exposure to almost all pesticides had no effects on birth weight and length. However, we found small but significant associations (i) between the use of fumigation insecticides and decreased birth weight, and (ii) between frequencies of exposure to pyrethroid pesticides, especially mosquito coils/mats, and suppression of neonatal length growth. Prenatal exposure to household pesticides, especially those containing pyrethroids, might adversely influence fetal and postnatal growth trajectories.
Keyphrases
  • birth weight
  • pregnant women
  • weight gain
  • risk assessment
  • gestational age
  • healthcare
  • body mass index
  • physical activity
  • emergency department
  • weight loss
  • mental health
  • zika virus
  • preterm birth
  • low birth weight