| Literature DB >> 29146078 |
Jangwoo Lee1, Kyungho Choi1, Jeongim Park2, Hyo-Bang Moon3, Gyuyeon Choi4, Jeong Jae Lee4, Eunsook Suh4, Hai-Joong Kim5, So-Hee Eun5, Gun-Ha Kim5, Geum Joon Cho5, Sung Koo Kim6, Sungjoo Kim6, Su Young Kim7, Seunghyo Kim7, Soyong Eom8, Sooran Choi9, Young Don Kim10, Sungkyoon Kim11.
Abstract
Bisphenol A (BPA) exposure during the perinatal and postnatal periods increases the susceptibility to disease over the life cycle. However, information on the BPA delivered to fetuses or infants via the placenta and breastfeeding is limited. We determined the BPA exposure levels in various bodily fluids and tissues of pregnant women and described fetus and infant exposures to BPA based on associations and BPA ratios in mother-neonate paired samples. Maternal serum, urine, placenta, breast milk, cord serum, and neonatal urine samples were collected from 318 mother-neonate pairs at six university hospitals in Korea. BPA levels were detected using liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry. The ratios of the BPA levels in the other sample types to the levels in maternal serum were calculated. BPA was detected in 79.5-100% of the maternal and fetal samples. The median BPA concentration in the samples decreased in the order of neonatal urine (4.75ng/mL), maternal urine (2.86ng/mL), cord serum (1.71ng/mL), maternal serum (1.56ng/mL), breast milk (0.74ng/mL), and the placenta (0.53ng/g). We estimated the ratios of BPA levels in the other sample types to those in maternal serum. The median (95th percentile) cord serum-to-maternal serum ratio was 1.12 (15.2) for 160 mother-fetal pairs, in which BPA was detected in both samples. The placenta-, maternal urine-, neonatal urine-, and breast milk-to-maternal serum ratios were 0.28 (5.31), 1.79 (29.9), 1.98 (28.2), and 0.51 (10.5), respectively. In addition, the median (95th percentile) cord serum-to-placenta ratio was 4.03 (45.8), and the neonatal urine-to-cord serum ratio was 1.95 (25.6). The 95th percentile values were 14-20-fold greater than the medians. Urine contained the highest BPA concentrations, followed by serum, breast milk, and the placenta. The variations of BPA ratio show individual differences in the amounts of BPA delivered from mother to fetus.Entities:
Keywords: BPA ratio; Bisphenol A; Neonates; Pregnant women; Tissue distribution
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29146078 DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.10.042
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Total Environ ISSN: 0048-9697 Impact factor: 7.963