| Literature DB >> 19543409 |
Johanna Brinkel1, Mobarak H Khan, Alexander Kraemer.
Abstract
Underground water in many regions of the world is contaminated with high concentrations of arsenic and the resulting toxicity has created a major environmental and public health problem in the affected regions. Chronic arsenic exposure can cause many diseases, including various physical and psychological harms. Although the physical problems caused by arsenic toxicity are well reported in literature, unfortunately the consequences of arsenic exposure on mental health are not adequately studied. Therefore we conducted a review of the available literature focusing on the social consequences and detrimental effects of arsenic toxicity on mental health. Chronic arsenic exposures have serious implications for its victims (i.e. arsenicosis patients) and their families including social instability, social discrimination, refusal of victims by community and families, and marriage-related problems. Some studies conducted in arsenic affected areas revealed that arsenic exposures are associated with various neurologic problems. Chronic arsenic exposure can lead to mental retardation and developmental disabilities such as physical, cognitive, psychological, sensory and speech impairments. As health is defined by the World Health Organization as "a state of complete physical, mental and social wellbeing", the social dimensions have a large impact on individual's mental health. Furthermore studies in China und Bangladesh have shown that mental health problems (e.g. depression) are more common among the people affected by arsenic contamination. Our study indicates various neurological, mental and social consequences among arsenic affected victims. Further studies are recommended in arsenic-affected areas to understand the underlying mechanisms of poor mental health caused by arsenic exposure.Entities:
Keywords: Arsenic; Bangladesh; mental health; social problems
Mesh:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19543409 PMCID: PMC2697931 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph6051609
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Neurotoxicological effects due to arsenic exposure among children in arsenic affected countries.
| Authors and years of publication | Sample size (target population) and study design | Main results |
|---|---|---|
| Rosado | n=602 (6–8 years old school children in Mexico); Cross-sectional | Arsenic affected children’s cognitive development after adjusting for age, sex, mother’s education and hemoglobin concentration and so on. |
| Wasserman | n=301 (6 years old children in Bangladesh); Cross-sectional | Arsenic exposure was negatively associated with children intellectual level after adjusting for many potential variables. |
| Wasserman | n=201 (10 years old children in Bangladesh); Cross-sectional | Arsenic exposure was negatively associated with children intellectual level after adjusting for many potential variables. |
| Tsai | n=109 (School adolescents with an average age of 14 years in Taiwan); Case-control | Neurobehavioral development like pattern memory and switching attention were significantly affected by long-term exposure to arsenic after adjusting for education and sex. |
| von Ehrenstein | n=351 (5 to 15 years old children from the source population in West Bengal, India); Cross-sectional | Current arsenic concentrations in urine were associated with small decrements in intellectual testing in school-aged children. |
| Calderon | n=80 (6 to 9 years School children in Mexico); Cross-sectional | Higher level of urinary arsenic had negative influences on CNS function like verbal comprehension, long-term memory and attention. |
| Asadullah and Chaudhury [ | n=7,710 (Secondary school children (enrolled in grade 8) in Bangladesh); Cross-sectional | Cognitive development of children is significantly negatively affected by arsenic. |