| Literature DB >> 18462773 |
Annalisa Abballe1, Terri J Ballard, Elena Dellatte, Alessandro di Domenico, Fabiola Ferri, Anna Rita Fulgenzi, Giulio Grisanti, Nicola Iacovella, Anna Maria Ingelido, Rainer Malisch, Roberto Miniero, Maria Grazia Porpora, Serena Risica, Gianni Ziemacki, Elena De Felip.
Abstract
Breast milk monitoring studies of persistent and toxic environmental contaminants are of primary importance for carrying out an adequate risk assessment at the actual levels of human exposure and represent a major source of information on infant perinatal exposure. Milk specimens from mothers of the general population of the Venice and Rome areas were collected over the 1998-2001 period, pooled, and analyzed for selected persistent organic pollutants such as polychlorodibenzodioxins (PCDDs), polychlorodibenzofurans (PCDFs), polychlorobiphenyls (PCBs), organochlorinated pesticides (p,p'-DDE, p,p'-DDT, hexachlorobenzene), and polybromodiphenyl ethers (PBDEs), and the heavy metals Cd, Co, Cu, Hg, Mn, Pb, Sn, and Zn. The goal was to verify whether mother milk from the Venice area, whose lagoon is partly under direct industrial impact, had a contaminant load greater than that from the Rome area, primarily urban. For mothers from the Venice area, the correlation between fish and fishery product consumption and contaminant concentrations in milk was also explored, with however inconclusive results. The concentrations of PCDDs, PCDFs, dioxin-like PCBs, and organochlorinated pesticides determined in this study were compared with those available from a previous analytical work carried out on 1987 human milk pools of domestic origin: the declining trend of the aforesaid contaminants in milk is confirmed to be in agreement with what was observed in other European countries. The breast milk content of (137)Cs and (40)K radionuclides was also determined and compared with data obtained in other research programmes carried out in Italy: the health risk for breastfed infants was deemed to be not significant.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18462773 DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2007.12.036
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chemosphere ISSN: 0045-6535 Impact factor: 7.086