| Literature DB >> 24860722 |
Christina R Tyler1, Andrea M Allan1.
Abstract
Arsenic toxicity is a worldwide health concern as several millions of people are exposed to this toxicant via drinking water, and exposure affects almost every organ system in the body including the brain. Recent studies have shown that even low concentrations of arsenic impair neurological function, particularly in children. This review will focus on the current epidemiological evidence of arsenic neurotoxicity in children and adults, with emphasis on cognitive dysfunction, including learning and memory deficits and mood disorders. We provide a cohesive synthesis of the animal studies that have focused on neural mechanisms of dysfunction after arsenic exposure including altered epigenetics; hippocampal function; glucocorticoid and hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis (HPA) pathway signaling; glutamatergic, cholinergic and monoaminergic signaling; adult neurogenesis; and increased Alzheimer's-associated pathologies. Finally, we briefly discuss new studies focusing on therapeutic strategies to combat arsenic toxicity including the use of selenium and zinc.Entities:
Keywords: Adult; Alzheimer’s disease; Anxiety; Arsenate; Arsenic; Arsenite; Children; Cholinergic; Cognition; Cortisol; DNA methylation; Depression; Development; Epigenetics; Exposure; Glucocorticoid receptor; Glutamatergic; HPA; Histone modifications; IQ; Lead; Monoaminergic; Mood disorders; Neurogenesis; Neurological deficits; Neurotoxicity; Teratogen
Year: 2014 PMID: 24860722 PMCID: PMC4026128 DOI: 10.1007/s40572-014-0012-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Environ Health Rep ISSN: 2196-5412
Impacts of arsenic on cognition in children and adults
| Cognitive assessment | Exposure | Age | Finding | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intelligence (IQ) | Low and High | Children | ↓verbal IQ ↓total IQ | Calderon et al. 2001 [ |
| Medium | Children | ↓total IQ | Rosado et al. 2007 [ | |
| Low and High | Children (5-15 y.o.) | ↓total IQ | Von Ehrenstein et al. 2007 [ | |
| Low | Children (9-10 y.o.) | ↓total IQ | Wasserman et al. 2004 [ | |
| Low | Children (6 y.o. and 10 y.o.) | ↓total IQ | Wasserman et al. 2007 [ | |
| Low and Medium | Children (5 y.o.) | ↓total IQ (females) ↓verbal IQ (females) | Hamandani et al. 2011 [ | |
| Cognitive skills (reading, writing, vocabulary, math) | Medium | Children (6-7 y.o.) | ↓capacity in figure design, vocabulary, letter sequencing | Rosado et al. 2007 [ |
| Medium | Children (6-7 y.o.) | ↓capacity in vocabulary | Roy et al. 2011 [ | |
| Low and High | Children (5-15 y.o.) | ↓capacity in vocabulary, language | Von Ehrenstein et al. 2007 [ | |
| Low | Adults | ↓capacity in executive function, mental acuity, verbal skills | O’Bryant et al. 2011 [ | |
| Visual perception | Medium | Children (6-7 y.o.) | ↓capacity in visual search | Rosado et al. 2007 [ |
| Low and High | Children (5-15 y.o.) | ↓capacity in picture completion, object assembly | Von Ehrenstein et al. 2007 [ | |
| Mental health | Medium | Children | ↑risk for ADHD | Roy et al. 2011 [ |
| Low | Adults | ↑incidence of depression | Zierold et al. 2004 [ | |
| Medium | Adults | ↑symptoms of anxiety | Dang et al. 2008 [ | |
| Low → High | Adults | ↓quality of life and mental health | Syed et al. 2012 [ | |
| High | Adults | ↑symptoms of altered mental health | Fujino et al. 2004 [ | |
| Low → High | Adults | ↑insomnia ↓general health | Guo et al. 2007 [ | |
| Low → High | Adults | ↑risk of psychiatric disorder, depression, anxiety | Sen et al. 2012 [ |
Exposure
Low: less than 50 μg/L (ppb) urinary arsenic or water arsenic
Medium: between 50 μg/L (ppb) and 100 μg/L (ppb) urinary or water arsenic
High: more than 100 μg/L (ppb) urinary arsenic or water arsenic
Factors comorbid with arsenic exposure
| Exposure to arsenic impacts performance on a variety of cognitive assessments in children; however, other factors could contribute to the negative effects of arsenic. |
| Metal mixtures: Arsenic is not the only naturally occurring element that leaches into water sources. Other metals including lead, mercury, manganese, cadmium, and copper exist in significant quantities, particularly in well water. Thus, arsenic may not be acting alone in disrupting cognition in children; it may be the mixture of metals that is reducing intelligence and other measures of neurological function. |
| Socioeconomic status: Unfortunately, millions of children live in poverty all over the world; and low socioeconomic status correlates with reduced cognitive function. Children living in poor areas typically do not have access to clean water and are more likely to be exposed to high levels of arsenic. |
| Nutrition: Along with lower SES and exposure to metals, children exposed to arsenic typically have poor nutrition, likely due to an impoverished situation. Additionally, metabolism of arsenic can interfere with nutrient absorbance. It’s likely that arsenic exposure in combination with these other factors accounts for the cognitive deficits observed in exposed children. |
The impact of arsenic on behavioral tasks in rodent studies
| Type of cognition | Task | Exposure | Finding | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Learning and memory | Morris water maze (MWM) | Adult, chronic, high | ↓acquisition | Luo et al. 2009 [ |
| Adult, chronic, low | ↓acquisition | Sharma & Sharma, 2013 [ | ||
| Fear/cued conditioning | Adult, acute, low | ↓recall | Cronican et al. 2013 [ | |
| 8-way radial arm maze | Developmental, chronic, low | ↓acquisition | Martinez-Finley et al. 2009 [ | |
| Y-maze; MWM | Adult, chronic, high | ↓acquisition | Jing et al. 2012 [ | |
| Radial water maze | Adult, acute, low | ↓acquisition | Cronican et al. 2013 [ | |
| Novel object exploration | Developmental, chronic, low | ↓performance | Martinez-Finley et al. 2009 [ | |
| Adult, acute, low | ↓performance | Cronican et al. 2013 [ | ||
| Locomotion and motor | Startle/reflex response/ spontaneous alteration/ developmental battery tests | Developmental, low → high | ↓coordination ↑response time to completion no change in low group | Luo et al. 2013 [ |
Developmental, low → high | No change in either group | Gandhi et al. 2012 [ | ||
| Rotarod | Adult, subchronic, high | ↓coordination ↑ataxia | Yadav et al. 2009 [ | |
| Spontaneous locomotor activity | Adults, chronic, low → high | Dose-related ↑locomotion with low dose ↓locomotion with high dose ↑ locomotion females | Bardullas et al. 2009 [ | |
| Adults, chronic, low → high | no change in low group ↓ locomotion | Rodriguez et al. 2010 [ | ||
| Total movement | Adult, chronic, low → high | ↓ movement at high dose | Bardullas et al. 2009 [ | |
| Adult, subchronic, high | ↓ total movement | Yadav et al. 2009 [ | ||
| Adult, chronic, low → high | ↓ total movement | Rodriguez et al. 2010 [ | ||
| Grip strength | Adult, subchronic, high | ↓ strength | Yadav et al. 2009 [ |
Exposure type:
Developmental: in utero to postnatal exposure (maternal consumption of arsenic)
Adult exposure: from weaning up to death
Exposure level:
High exposure: ppm (mg/L)
Medium exposure: above 100 ppb (μg/L)
Low exposure: below 50 ppb (μg/L)
Low → high; multiple doses examined
Exposure paradigm:
Acute: less than two weeks
Subchronic: less than one month
Chronic: more than one month