| Literature DB >> 27576472 |
Donna J Coetzee1, Patricia M McGovern2, Raghavendra Rao3, Lisa J Harnack4, Michael K Georgieff5, Irina Stepanov6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Children's exposure to manganese (Mn) is a public health concern and consistent policy guidelines for safe levels of Mn exposure is lacking. The complexity of establishing exposure thresholds for Mn partially relates to its dual role as an essential micronutrient with low levels required for good health, but also as a neurotoxin at high levels. Questions exist about the age-related susceptibility to excess Mn, particularly for children, and how best to measure chronic exposures. To address this concern we conducted a systematic review of studies examining children's exposure to Mn and neurodevelopmental outcomes focused on selection of biomarker-based and environmental measurements of Mn exposure to identify the scientific advances and research gaps.Entities:
Keywords: Children’s neurodevelopment; Exposure biomarkers; Exposure measurement; Manganese
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27576472 PMCID: PMC5004305 DOI: 10.1186/s12940-016-0174-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health ISSN: 1476-069X Impact factor: 5.984
Summary of study characteristics
| Study Author Date of Publication | Country | Study design | Study Population | Sample size | Environ-mental Mn Measure | Biomarker Measure | Neurodevelopmental Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Barlow et al. (1983) [ | United Kingdom | Case control | Children ≤ 16 years | 68 exposed (65 controls) | None measured | Hair | Diagnosis of hyperactivity by personal physicians, child psychiatrists and social workers |
| Collipp et al. (1983) [ | Long Island, New York, US | Cross-sectional | Infants and children ≤ 4 years | 70 | Infant formula | Hair | No health outcome |
| Case control | Learning disabled children and controls 7–10 years | 16 learning disabled children; (44 controls) | Hair | Learning disability for 7-10 year olds (parent and teacher reports, child interview, and neurological exam) | |||
| Takser et al. (2003) [ | Paris, France | Prospective | Mother-infant pairs followed until 6 years | 247 mother- infant pairs, 100 after 6 years) | None measured | Hair, cord blood, placenta | Attention, nonverbal memory, hand skills, general psychomotor indices (Brunet-Lézine development quotient at 9 months), (McCarthy General Cognitive Index at 3 and 6 years) |
| Wasserman et al. (2006) [ | Araihazar Bangladesh | Cross sectional | Children 9.5–10.5 years | 142 | Well water | Blood | IQ (Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children, WISC-III) |
| Wright et al. (2006) [ | Miami, OK, US | Cross sectional | Children 11–13 years | 31 | Not measured, but location coexisted with a Superfund site (Pb, Zn, Mn, Cd) | Hair | IQ (Wechsler Abbreviated Scale of Intelligence or WASI); Wide Range Assessment of Visual Motor Ability; receptive scales of Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals; California Verbal Learning Test-Children; Behavioral Assessment System for Children; tests of story memory (Wide Range Assessment of Memory and Learning); Children’s Depression Inventory, and the Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Functions |
| Bouchard et al. (2007) [ | Québec, Canada | Cross sectional | Children 6–15 | 46 | Well water | Hair | Hyperactivity, oppositional behavior, cognitive problems, inattention, (Revised Conners Teachers’ and Parents’ Rating Scales) |
| Ericson et al. (2007) [ | United States | Prospective | NICHD Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development who shed a tooth | 27 | None measured | Tooth enamel | Behavioral disinhibition (Forbidden Toy Task), sustained attention (Mirsky Continuous Performance Test), impulsive error score (Children’s Stroop Test), and total, internalizing, externalizing and attention problems (Children Behavior Checklist) |
| Kim et al. (2009) [ | Seoul, Seongnam, Ulsan, and Yeoncheon, South Korea | Cross sectional | Children 8–11 years | 261 | None measured | Blood | IQ including vocabulary, arithmetic, picture arrangement and block design (Korean Educational Development Institute-Wechsler Intelligence Scales) |
| Claus Henn et al. (2010) [ | Mexico City, Mexico | Prospective | Children enrolled at or before birth and followed through age 3 | 448 | None measured | Blood | Mental Development Index (MDI) and the Psychomotor Development Index (PDI) (Bayley Scales of Infant Development-II) |
| Riojas- Rodriguez et al. (2010) [ | Hidalgo, Mexico | Cross sectional | Children 7–11 years | 79 (93 controls) | None measured | Hair, blood | IQ (WISC-Revised) |
| Bouchard et al. (2011) [ | Québec, Canada | Cross sectional | Children 6–13 years | 362 | Water, diet | Hair | IQ (WASI) |
| Hernández-Bonilla et al. (2011) [ | Hidalgo, Mexico | Cross sectional | Children 7–11 years | 100 exposed (95 controls) | Prior studies show airborne Mn levels (median 0.10 g/m3) exceed 2006 US EPA Reference Concentration (0.05 μg/m3) | Hair, blood | Motor function: grooved pegboard, finger tapping, and Santa Ana test |
| Khan et al. (2011) [ | Araihazar Bangladesh | Cross sectional | Children 8–11 years | 201 | Water | Blood | Child behaviors including internalizing and externalizing subscales and a total score (TRF Achenbach System of Empirically Based Assessment) |
| Menezes-Filho et al. (2011) [ | Salvador, Brazil | Cross sectional | Children 6–12 years | 83 | None measured | Hair, blood | IQ (WISC - III) |
| Parvez et al. (2011) [ | Araihazar Bangladesh | Cross sectional | Children 8–11 years | 303 | Drinking water | Blood, toenails | Motor function (Bruininks-Oseretsky Test) including total score and subscales for coordination of hands and fingers and arms and hands, body coordination, strength and agility |
| Khan et al. (2012) [ | Araihazar Bangladesh | Cross sectional | Children 8–11 years | 840 | Water | None measured | Academic achievement from nationwide exams in math and language |
| Wasserman et al. (2011) [ | Araihazar Bangladesh | Cross sectional | Children ages 8–11 years | 299 | Well water | Blood | IQ, (WISC-IV) including verbal comprehension, perceptual reasoning, working memory, processing speed, and full scale scores |
| Claus Henn et al. (2012) [ | Mexico City, Mexico | Prospective | Children enrolled prenatally; followed to 36 months | 455 | None measured | Blood | Bayley Scales of Infant Development-II (MDI and PDI) |
| Lucchini, Zoni, et al. (2012) [ | Valamonica and Garda Lake, Italy | Cross sectional | Children 11–14 years | 299 | PM10, soil | Hair, blood, urine | IQ (WISC-III) including the overall, verbal and performance scores), and behavior (Conners-Wells’ Adolescent Self-Report Scale Long Form) |
| Lucchini, Guazzetti et al. (2012) [ | Valamonica and Garda Lake, Italy | Cross sectional | Children 11–14 years | 54 exposed (157 control) | PM10, soil, tap water, diet | Hair, Blood | Motor coordination (Luria Nebraska Battery) including hand dexterity, odor identification and tremor intensity |
| Bhang et al. (2013) [ | South Korea | Cross-sectional | Children 8–11 years | 1005 | None measured | Blood | IQ (WASI), ADHD Diagnostic System, Stroop Color-Word Test, Children’s Color Trails Test, ADHD Rating Scale, Learning Disability Evaluation Scale, Child Behavioral Checklist and the Diagnostic Interview Schedule for Children-IV |
| Torres- Agustín et al. (2013) [ | Hidalgo, Mexico | Cross sectional | Children 7–11 years | 79 (95 control) | PM10, soil | Hair, Blood | Memory and learning (Children’s Auditory Verbal Learning Test) including learning curve and level, immediate and delayed recall, recognition accuracy and immediate memory span |
| Lin et al. | Taipei, Taiwan | Prospective | Mother-Infant pairs in the Taiwan Birth Panel | 230 | None | Cord | Development (Comprehensive Developmental Inventory for Infants and Toddlers) global, cognitive, language, motor, gross motor, fine motor, social, self-help, and behavioral development. |
| Carvalho et al. (2014) [ | Simões-Filho district, Bahia, Brazil | Cross | Children 7–12 years | 70 | None | Hair | IQ (WISC-III), short-term, and working memory, sustained attention problem solving (Wisconsin Card Sorting Test, WCST-64) and sustained attention (TAVIS-III) |
| Menezes- Filho et al. (2014) [ | Salvador, Bahia, Brazil | Cross | Children 7–12 years | 70 | None measured, but airborne exposure from residential proximity to ferromanganese plant | Hair, | Internalizing and externalizing behaviors, and attention problems (Children’s Behavioral Checklist) |
| Oulhote et al. (2014) [ | Quebec, Canada | Cross | Children 6–13 years | 375 | Tap water, water consumption | Hair | Memory and learning (California Verbal Learning Test-Children’s Version), Connors Continuous Performance Test II, Version 5, Digit Span, Santa Ana Test, manual finger tapping |
| Rink et al. (2014) [ | Montevideo, Uruguay | Cross | 14–45 months old | 60 | None measured | Hair | Bayley Scales of Infant Development-III, cognitive, language, fine and gross motor abilities |
| Yang, et al. (2014) [ | Shangai, China | Prospective | Mother-infant pairs | 933 | None measured | Cord | Neonatal Behavioral Neurological Assessment |
| Chung et al. (2015) [ | Seoul, Ulsan and Cheonan, South Korea | Prospective | Maternal - infant pairs recruited prenatally | 232 mother- infant pairs assessed at 6 months postpartum and followed for 3 years | None reported | Maternal blood | Bayley Scales of Infant Development |
| do Nascimento et al. (2015) [ | Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil | Cross | Children 6–12 years | 69 | Tap water | Hair, | Nonverbal IQ (Raven’s Colored Progressive Matrices) |
| Gunier et al. (2015) [ | Salinas Valley, | Prospective | Children recruited from prenatal cohort; followed to 7 years | 197 (prenatal) | Residential proximity to agricultural use of Mn- containing fungicides and ‘take home’exposures | Teeth | Cognitive abilities, fine and gross motor coordination (Bayley’s Scales of Infant Development) |
| Haynes et al. (2015) [ | Marietta, Ohio, US | Cross | Children 7–9 years | 404 | None reported; PM2.5 associated with residential proximity to a ferromanganese refinery | Hair, | IQ (WISC-IV), including perceptual reasoning, processing speed, working memory and verbal comprehension |
| Mora et al. (2015) [ | Salinas | Prospective | Children enrolled prenatally provided shed teeth starting at 7–9 years, followed to 10.5 years | 248 (prenatal) | Residential proximity to agricultural use of Mn- containing fungicides | Teeth | Behavior including internalizing, externalizing and hyperactivity (Behavioral Assessment System for Children; Conners’ Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder; Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, DSM-IV), accuracy and impulse control (Connors’ Continuous Performance Test II, Version 5) |
| Ode et al. (2015) [ | Malmö, Sweden | Case | Children born 1987 to 2000 diagnosed with ADHD 5–17 years; matched controls | 166 (case-control pairs) | None | Cord | ADHD diagnosis (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, DSMMD-III, IV) |
| Shin et al. (2015) [ | Seoul, | Case | Children, 6–16 years, ADHD cases referred post-diagnosis | 40 cases (43 controls) | None | Hair | ADHD diagnosis |
| Sun et al. (2015) [ | Jiangsu, | Cross | Children, 8–12 years with natural environmental lead exposure | 446 | Mean community Pb concentrations in surface soil: 27.7 mg/kg, -1 and undetected levels in outdoor air (<0.0035 mg/ m-3 | Blood | IQ (Combined Raven Test |
Summary of results from studies examining manganese concentrations in hair (Hair-Mn or H-Mn)
| Study | Children’s Ages and Mean Mn Level | Association with Environmental Mn | Association with Neurodevelopment | Other metals’ mean concentrations in hair |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Barlow et al. (1983) [ | <16 years | None measured | Hyperactivity was more prevalent in hyperactive children (mean age: 7.6 years) but at lower levels of statistical significance (90 % confidence) using bivariate analyses. | Lower levels of zinc (Zn) were associated with hyperactive children: 83.4 (32.3) compared to controls: 99.1 (54.3), 95 % confidence using bivariate analysis. Other metals were nonsignificant in association with the outcome including: (Cadmium (Cd), Copper (Cu), Iron (Fe), Lead (Pb), and Magnesium (Mg). |
| Collipp et al. (1983) [ |
| None measured | Significantly higher hair-Mn levels from learning disabled children, 7–10 years old, compared to children without the condition. | Not applicable |
|
| Significantly greater hair-Mn in formula-fed infants. | None applicable | Not applicable | |
| Takser et al. (2003) [ | Newborns to 6 years 0.751 | None measured | No association was found between hair-Mn post-childbirth and general psychomotor developmental indices at 9 months and a general cognitive index at 3 and 6 years in models adjusted for maternal age and education, smoking, labor duration, children’s sex and cord blood lead levels and other confounders. | Not applicable |
| Wright et al. (2006) [ | 11–13 years | None measured | Lower full-scale IQ, verbal learning and memory scores were associated with higher concentrations of hair-Mn from children, on average 12.6 years old, in analyses adjusted for maternal education, child sex and concentrations of lead PbH. | Higher arsenic (As) levels, particularly in combination with higher Mn levels, associated with lower IQ, verbal learning, and memory scores. No associations found with Cd levels. |
| Bouchard et al. (2007) [ | 6–15 years | Greater MnH concentrations from children who drank well water with higher Mn-water. | Greater hyperactive and oppositional classroom behavior was associated with higher hair-Mn from children, on average, 11 years old, in analyses adjusted for age, sex and income. No interaction between | Not applicable |
| Hernández-Bonilla et al. (2011) [ | 7–11 years | Respiratory Mn exposures were associated with residential proximity to Mn mines, but specific measures were not reported. | Hair-Mn was not associated with neuromotor outcomes (grooved pegboard, finger tapping repetition and Santa Anna test in children, on average, 9 years old in analyses adjusted for Pb in blood, hemoglobin, sex, age and maternal education. | Not applicable |
| Menezes- | 6–12 years | None measured, but Mn exposures were from residential proximity to Mn alloy production plant. | Lower full scale and verbal IQ scores in children, on average, 8.8 years old, in analyses adjusted for maternal education and nutritional status. A ten-fold increase of hair-Mn was associated with a 6.7 - point loss in Verbal IQ score. | Children with iron deficiency had higher hair-Mn (15.94 ± 19.68 μg/g; |
| Riojas- | 7–11 years | Median airborne concentration of Mn in PM10 of exposed (0.13 μg/m3) versus unexposed (0.02 μg/m3) communities, but personal exposures were not reported. | Lower full scale, verbal and performance IQ scores in children, on average, 9 years old, in analyses adjusted for blood-Pb, hemoglobin, age, sex and nutritional status. Sex significantly modified the association with the strongest inverse association in young girls. There was little evidence of an association in boys. | Not applicable |
| Bouchard et al. (2011) [ | 6–13 years | Hair-Mn levels were associated with higher Mn in water (Water-Mn) (mean: 98 μg/L, GM:120 μg/L), but not in diet. | Lower full-scale IQ scores were associated with increased hair-Mn concentrations in children, on average, 9 years old, in analyses adjusted for maternal intelligence and education, income, sex and age of children, Fe concentrations in water and other confounders. A 10-fold increase in | Not applicable |
| Lucchini, et al. (2012) [ | 11–14 years | Significant differences for Mn concentrations in soil (soil-Mn) and air (air-Mn) by proximity to industrial sites with historical Mn emissions, but not for tap water, diet or hair. | Tremor intensity in dominant hand was positively associated with hair-Mn in children, on average, 12.9 years old, in analyses adjusted for age, gender, SES, family size, parity order, parents’ education, smoking habits and soil concentrations of Pb and other metals. Boys had increased tremor intensity relative to girls. | Not applicable |
| Lucchini, et al. (2012) [ | 11–14 years | No association between concentrations of hair-Mn with soil- or air-Mn | No association between hair-Mn concentrations with full-scale, verbal or performance IQ, or behavioral and attention deficit hyperactivity scores for children, on average, 12.9 years old, with Mn exposure modeled as a main effect or an interactive term with blood-Pb in analyses adjusted for age, gender, family size, SES, area of residence, hemoglobin, ferritin and confounders. | |
| Torres- | 7–11 years | Greater hair-Mn concentrations in children in exposed group. Mn concentrations in outdoor air from Mn mining and ranged from the median: 0.08, μg/m3 in the exposed location compared to the median: 0.02, μg/m3 in the control location. | Lower long-term memory and learning scores were associated with increased hair-Mn in children, on average, 9 years old, in analyses adjusted for children’s sex, blood-Pb, age, hemoglobin and maternal education. The negative association was stronger for girls. | Not applicable |
| Rink et al. (2014) [ | 14–45 months | None measured | Lower scores in cognitive and expressive language tests in children, on average, 28.8 months old, but only in unadjusted models. Boys had a significantly positive association between hair-Mn concentrations and receptive languages scores in analyses adjusted for hair-Pb concentrations, child hemoglobin and age, paternal education, maternal IQ, SES, and other confounders. | Not applicable |
| Carvalho et al. (2014) [ | 7–12 years | None were measured, but Mn exposure was related to residential location and air emissions from an iron-Mn alloy plant. | Lower full-scale IQ, and lower scores on Vocabulary, Block Design, and Digit Span tests were associated with increased hair-Mn for children, on average, 9.4 years old, in analyses adjusted for maternal education and children’s age. Each 1 μg/g increase in hair-Mn was associated with a decrease of approximately 1 full-scale IQ point and lower test scores for executive function, strategic visual formation and verbal working memory. No significant sex differences for hair-Mn concentrations. | |
| Menezes- | 7–12 years | None were measured, but Mn exposure was related to residential location and air emissions from an iron-Mn alloy plant. | Externalizing behaviors and attention problems on the Child Behavior Checklist (CBC) for girls was significantly associated with higher hair-Mn. No significant association was found between CBC scores for boys in sex-stratified models adjusted for age (with boys) or maternal IQ (with girls). | |
| Oulhote et | 6–13 years | Greater water-Mn (mean: 99 μg/L; GM: 20 μg/L) & hair. | Mn exposure was associated with significant decrements in memory (hair and water) and attention (hair), and motor function (water) adjusted for maternal education and nonverbal intelligence, tobacco consumption, child sex, age and other confounders. Estimates of associations by sex were similar. | |
| do Nascimento et al. (2015) [ | 6–12 years | Greater Mn in drinking water (mean: 20 μg/L) rural sites and (mean: 1.0 μg/L) urban sites) associated with greater Mn levels in hair. | Lower (nonverbal) IQ scores were | Additional, similarly specified models were tested for the association of Pb, Cr, As, Hg, and Fe in hair on cognitive outcomes. Only hair-Fe showed a significant and inverse association with outcomes. |
| Haynes et al. (2015) [ | 7–9 years | Air-Mn associated with home proximity to ferromanganese refinery. | Lower full-scale IQ and perceptual | Not applicable |
| Shin et al. (2015) [ | 6–16 years | None measured | No association between hair-Mn and ADHD was found in children on, average, 9.7 years old when analysis was adjusted for confounders of age, sex and full-scale IQ. | Not applicable |
1 Geometric Mean used
Summary of results from studies examining manganese concentrations in blood (blood-Mn)
| Study | Mean Mn Level (μg/L),(SD) | Association with Environmental Mn | Association with | Association of other metals’ mean (SD) concentrations in blood, with the outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wasserman et al. (2006) [ | 10 year olds | No association was found with water-Mn (Mean: 795 μg/L). | No association was found between blood-Mn concentrations and overall, verbal and performance IQ scores in adjusted analyses, but water-Mn was associated with lower full-scale, performance and verbal IQ raw scores in a dose-dependent fashion. | Blood-Mn was not significantly correlated with blood-Pb or blood-As. When all three blood metals were included in analyses only mean blood-Pb concentrations,12 μg/dL (3.7) were associated with IQ scores. |
| Kim et al. (2009) [ | 8–11 years olds | None measured | Lower overall and verbal (but not performance) IQ scores were associated with blood-Mn in analyses adjusted for maternal age, parental education and smoking, SES, child gender and age and other confounders. | Blood-Pb concentrations of 1.73 μg/dL (0.8) were associated with IQ scores in adjusted analyses with evidence of an additive interaction with blood-Mn. Effect modification was suggested as IQ scores of children with blood-Mn > 14 μg/L were significantly associated with blood-Pb whereas scores for children with blood-Mn < 14 μg/L were not. |
| Claus Henn et al. (2010) [ | 12 month: | None measured | Blood-Mn had an inverse, U-shaped association with a concurrent measure of the Mental Development Index (MDI) scores at 12 months of age. Declines of 3.4 and 2.8 MDI points for the lowest and highest quintiles of blood-Mn relative to the middle three quintiles, correspond to declines of 0.37 and 0.31 SD units in the MDI. This association declined by 24 months and was nonsignificant in adjusted analyses including blood-Pb, sex, maternal IQ and education, hemoglobin and gestational age. No association was found with the PDI score. | Blood-Pb (cord, 12 and 24 month) concentrations were positively associated with 24 month blood-Mn concentrations. Indices of iron status (hemoglobin, ferritin) were inversely associated with Mn at 12 and 24 months of age. |
| Riojas-Rodriguez et al.(2010) [ | 7–11 year olds | 24-h median Mn in PM10 for the exposed (0.13 μg/m3) and control (0.02 μg/m3) communities | Exposed children showed nonsignificant, inverse associations of blood-Mn with lower full scale, verbal and performance IQ scores compared to controls. Analyses were adjusted for age, sex, hemoglobin, maternal education, blood-Pb. Differences by sex were nonsignificant. | Blood-Pb was higher in control (7.96 μg/dL) versus Mn-exposed (3.37 μg/dL) children and was correlated with blood-Mn ( |
| Hernández-Bonilla et al. (2011) [ | 7–11 year olds | Prior studies show | Blood-Mn was inversely associated with poorer finger tapping in analyses adjusted for age, sex, maternal education, hemoglobin and blood-Pb. Other motor function measures (grooved pegboard and Santa Anna test scores) were not significantly associated with blood-Mn. Sex differences for blood-Mn were nonsignificant. | Blood-Pb concentrations were higher in the Mn control (median: 8 μg/dL) versus the Mn exposed (median: 3.3 μg/dL) children. The associations with the outcomes were not reported. |
| Kahn et al. (2011) [ | 8–11 year olds | Non-significant association of blood-Mn with water-Mn (mean: 900 μg/L). | No association was found between blood-Mn and externalizing (attention problems and aggression) and internalizing (anxiety) behaviors and a total behavioral score in analyses adjusted for water-As, water-Mn, urinary creatin-adjusted As and blood-As, sex, maternal education and other variables. | There was no statistical association between biomarkers of As (blood or urine) with blood-Mn. |
| Menzes-Filho et al. (2011) [ | 6–12 year olds | None measured; Mn exposure was due to home proximity to Mn alloy production. | Blood-Mn concentrations were not associated with IQ scores in analyses adjusted for blood-Pb or low serum iron levels. | Blood-Pb was above 2 μg/dL for 51 % ( |
| Parvez et al. | 8–11 year olds | Water-Mn (mean: 725.5 μg/L). Children with higher water Mn (>500 μg/L) did not have higher levels of blood-Mn (14.5 vs. 15.0 μg/L; | No significant associations were found between blood-Mn and motor function measures (fine manual control, manual and body coordination, strength and agility). | Blood-Mn correlated slightly with blood-As (mean: 4.8 μg/L; SD: 3.2; r = 0.12; |
| Wasserman et al. (2011) [ | 8–11 year olds | Water-Mn (mean: 725.54) and blood-Mn did not vary predictably across groups with high and low levels of water-Mn. | Higher blood-Mn was associated with lower perceptual reasoning and working memory scores in analyses adjusted for maternal intelligence and age, children’s time in school, plasma ferritin, blood-As and other variables. Significant associations were not found for full scale IQ, verbal comprehension or processing speed scores. | Increased concentrations of blood-As (mean: 4.81 μg/L; SD: 3.22) were significantly associated with lower verbal comprehension in adjusted analyses. However, Mn by As interactions were not significant in adjusted models predicting IQ. |
| Claus Henn et al. (2012) [ | 12 months: | None measured | A synergistic interaction between lead and Mn for mental and psychomotor development scores was found at 12 (but not 24) months; greater lead toxicity with higher Mn levels in analyses adjusted for sex, hemoglobin, gestational age, maternal education and IQ. There were no significant sex differences in blood-Mn. | Concentrations of blood-Pb at 12 (mean:5.1 μg/dL; SD: 2.6) and 24 months (mean: 4.8 μg/dL; SD: 2.5). |
| Lucchini et al. (2012) [ | 11–14 year olds | Mn was measured in air PM10 airborne particles (median: 31.4 ng/m3 vs. 24.7 ng/m3) and soil (median:897 ppm vs. 409 ng/m3) in impacted compared to control areas, and water (below LD at 1 μg/L) and diet (median 2.66 mg/day) with no differences by locations. Soil-Mn was significantly, inversely associated with performance on the olfactory test. | Tremor intensity, dominant hand, was significantly and positively associated with blood-Mn in adjusted models (including parental smoking and alcohol use, and Mn in soil, air and hair). Sex differences were found with boys having lower increased tremor intensity. | Blood-Pb concentrations in the Mn exposed (mean: 1.72 μg/dL) and control (mean: 1.6 μg/dL) communities were very low. |
| Lucchini et al. (2012) [ | 11–14 year olds | Mn was measured in soil (median: 529.12 ppm), air: (median: 29.37 μg/m3), water, and diet | Mn was not associated with IQ (full scale, verbal and performance) or behavioral (hyperactivity, attention deficit) scores in adjusted analyses. | Blood-Pb concentrations averaged 1.71 μg/dL and were adversely associated with cognitive measures in adjusted analyses declining about 2.4 IQ points with a two-fold increase of blood-Pb. A bench-mark level of blood-Pb was associated with loss of 1 IQ point at 0.19 μg/dL and a lower 95%CI of 0.11 μg/dL. No interaction of Pb and Mn was observed. |
| Torres-Agustín et al. (2013) [ | 7–11 year olds Exposed: 9.5b Unexposed: 8.0 | Air sampling (PM10) conducted and Mn concentrations in outdoor air from Mn mining significantly higher for exposed (Outdoor median: 0.08 mg/m3) versus comparison group (Outdoor median: 0.08 mg/m3) Significantly greater blood-Mn concentrations in exposed than comparison children. | No significant associations between blood-Mn and verbal learning or memory in adjusted analyses. | Blood-Pb concentrations were significantly higher in the comparison group (8.0 μg/dL) than the Mn exposed group (3.3 μg/dL) and included in multivariate models of Mn exposure. |
| Bhang et al. (2013) [ | 8–11 year olds | None measured | Excess blood-Mn was associated with lower scores in thinking, reading, calculation, and learning scores and higher cognitive inhibition test scores in analyses adjusted for maternal and child age and IQ, child sex, and age, cotinine, blood-Pb and other variables. Lower blood-Mn was associated with lower cognitive inhibition scores. | Analyses were adjusted for blood-Pb and cotinine. |
| Chung et al. (2015) [ | Maternal, pre- delivery, 30.1 ± 3.5 years; 22.5 (6.5) | Not measured | Inverted U-shaped dose- response curve with lower psychomotor development scores in infants at 6 months with both low and high levels of Mn. Adjusted mean PDI (but not MDI) scores differed significantly across Mn concentration groups. No differences in effects by sex were observed. | None reported. |
| do Nascimento et al. (2015) [ | 6–12 year olds | Water-Mn concentrations differed significantly between rural (mean: 0.20 μg/L) and urban (mean:1.0 μg/L) children; associations with blood-Mn were not reported. | No significant associations found for blood-Mn and nonverbal IQ in analyses adjusting for age, parents education and child sex. | No associations were found between metals in blood and serum (Pb, Cr, As, Hg and Fe) and nonverbal IQ. |
| Haynes et al. (2015) [ | 7–9 year olds | Mn exposure resulted from residential proximity to ferromanganese refinery although measurements relative to the blood-Mn and the cognitive outcomes were not reported. | Blood-Mn was significantly associated with lower full scale IQ, perceptual reasoning, lower processing speed scores in analyses adjusted for hair-Mn, serum cotinine, blood-Pb, and community residence. Full scale IQ scores among children in the highest quartile of blood-Mn (>11.2 μg/L) were significantly lower than scores in children with blood-Mn between 8.2 μg/L to 11.2 μg/L (-3.51 points; 95 % CI:-6.64, -0.38). Children with the lowest quartile of blood-Mn (<8.2 μg/L) also had lower full scale IQ scores than children in the reference group although findings were nonsignificant (-2.14 points; 95%CI: -5.37, 1.09). The perceptual reasoning and processing speed scores had the strongest negative associations with blood-Mn. | Correlations between biomarkers found statistically significant included: blood-Mn and serum ferratin (mean: 34.4 ng/mL; r - 0.19, |
| Sun et al. (2015) [ | 8–12 year olds | Not measured | Blood-Mn was not significantly associated with IQ, but it was associated with urinary retinol binding protein (RBP) which was associated with blood-Mn. | Blood-Pb (GM: 33.7 μg/L) was significantly, inversely associated with IQ. |
a Geometric Means are given for exposed and control groups
b Median values for BMn
c Geometric Mean (GM) and Standard Deviation (GSD)
Summary of results from studies examining manganese in teeth
| Study | Sample and | Association with Environmental Mn | Association with | Association |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ericson et al. (2007) [ | Children from a maternal prenatal cohort that provided shed molars at 11–13 years. Mn concentrations from teeth enamel were measured but values not reported. | None measured | Prenatal Mn levels, representing exposures from the 20th gestational week were positively associated with behavioral outcomes: higher levels of disinhibition (36 months), impulsivity (4.5 years), externalizing and internalizing problems (1st and 3rd grades) and disruptive behaviors (3rd grade). No differences on standardized tests of cognitive ability or achievement. Analyses were adjusted for mothers’ education, family income and child ethnicity. Postnatal Mn levels, representing exposures from gestational weeks 62–64, only correlated with teachers’ reports of externalizing behaviors (1st and 3rd grades). | No association between pre- and postnatal Mn (r = 0.13, NS [ |
| Gunier et al. (2015) [ | Children from a maternal prenatal cohort provided shed teeth starting at age 7. Mn from dentin of deciduous teeth [ | Not reported, but related to residential proximity or use of agricultural fungicides with Mn. | Prenatal Mn levels were not associated with MDI or PDI at 6, 12 or 24 months and no interactions by sex. | Girls whose mothers had lower prenatal hemoglobin (HGB, <11.6 g/dL) had a decrease of 10.5 points (95%CI: -16.2, -4.8; |
| Mora et al. (2015) [ | Children from two integrated prenatal cohort samples provided teeth at 7–9 years. | None reported, but exposure related to agricultural exposures to Mn-containing fungicides. | Behavior: No significant associations for prenatal Mn and behavioral outcomes in children ages 7, 9 or 10.5 years. Higher postnatal Mn was significantly associated with maternal reports of hyperactive, internalizing and externalizing behaviors for children aged 7 years, but not at older ages. | Higher prenatal Mn levels were associated (NS) with poorer visual spatial memory outcomes at 9 years and poorer cognitive scores at 7 and 10. 5 years in children with higher Pb levels (≥0.8 μg/dL). |
a NS refers to a statistical association that is not significant
b Geometric Means and Standard Deviations