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Original Research

Neurobehavioral performance of Inuit children with increased prenatal exposure to methylmercury

, , , , , , & show all
Pages 41-49 | Published online: 15 Dec 2016
 

Abstract

Exposure to methylmercury from marine mammals and other seafood may affect the development of the central nervous system. In a traditional Inuit community in Qaanaaq, Greenland, mercury concentrations in cord blood and maternal hair have been examined in connection with all births. We examined 43 children at age 7–12 years with a battery of neurobehavioral tests. The average mercury concentration in hair was 5.0 μ/g and 1.5 μ/g in children and mothers, respectively. Clinical neurological examination did not reveal any obvious deficits. However, neuropsychological tests showed possible exposure-associated deficits, though only in a few cases reaching statistical significance. In conjunction with data from other studies, peak latencies on brainstem auditory evoked potentials tended to be prolonged at increased exposure levels. The data from the present study therefore appears in accordance with other evidence that prenatal or early postnatal exposures to methylmercury may cause subtle neurobehavioral deficits.

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Notes on contributors

Pál Weihe

Pál Weihe, born 1949, MD, Chief Physician, Department of Occupational and Public Health in the Faroe Islands. Since 1985 epidemiological studies on the impact of polluted seafood on children´s health and development.