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Influence of Prenatal Mercury Exposure Upon Scholastic and Psychological Test Performance: Benchmark Analysis of a New Zealand Cohort
Authors:Crump  Kenny S.  Kjellström  Tord  Shipp  Annette M.  Silvers  Abraham  Stewart  Alistair
Affiliation:ICF Kaiser, 602 East Georgia Ave., Ruston, Louisiana 71270.;Department of Community Health, The University of Auckland, Pri- vate Bag 92 019, Auckland, New Zealand;Electric Power Research Institute, 3412 Hillview Ave., palo Alto, California 94303
Abstract:This paper presents benchmark (BMD) calculations and additional regression analyses of data from a study in which scores from 26 scholastic and psychological tests administered to 237 6- and 7-year-old New Zealand children were correlated with the mercury concentration in their mothers' hair during pregnancy. The original analyses of five test scores found an association between high prenatal mercury exposure and decreased test performance, using category variables for mercury exposure. Our regression analyses, which utilized the actual hair mercury level, did not find significant associations between mercury and children's test scores. However, this finding was highly influenced by a single child whose mother's mercury hair level (86 mgkg) was more than four times that of any other mother. When that child was omitted, results were more indicative of a mercury effect and scores on six tests were significantly associated with the mothers' hair mercury level. BMDs calculated from five tests ranged from 32 to 73 mgkg hair mercury, and corresponding BMDLs (95% lower limits on BMDs) ranged from 17 to 24 mgkg. When the child with the highest mercury level was omitted, BMDs ranged from 13 to 21 mgkg, and corresponding BMDLs ranged from 7.4 to 10 mgkg.
Keywords:Benchmark    mercury    risk assessment    epidemiology
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