Literature DB >> 9717248

Mercury and organochlorine exposure from fish consumption in Hong Kong.

M D Dickman1, K M Leung.   

Abstract

The average person in Hong Kong consumes fish or shellfish four or more times a week averaging about 60 Kg of fish per year. Even though the mean mercury level in store-bought Hong Kong fish was only 0.12 mg/kg, corroborating evidence is presented from numerous studies to support the view that mercury bioaccumulates. By the time a typical Hong Kong male reaches 30 years of age he will have accumulated approximately 4 mg/kg mercury in his hair. By age 60, his hair mercury levels will have increased to about 7.5 mg/kg. Hair is a useful indicator of mercury exposure. In the U.S. over a million hair samples have been examined for mercury (mean, 1.5 mg/kg). The mean hair mercury concentration for over 200 Hong Kong residents was 3.3 mg/kg which is more than double the U.S. mean (well over one standard deviation above the U.S. mean). Two lines of evidence support the hypothesis that fish is the major source of methyl mercury in the diet of Hong Kong residents. 1. Individuals consuming 4 or more meals of fish per week had a hair mercury of 4.07 mg/kg dry weight of hair while those consuming fish less frequently had significantly lower levels (2.56 mg/kg). 2. Hong Kong residents that consume no fish had only 0.38 mg/kg hair mercury. The World Health Organization has adopted the U.S. EPA levels for mercury and recommends that food with mercury concentrations of 0.5 mg/kg or more should not be sold for human consumption. Data presented in this paper are consistent with the notion that adoption of a 0.3 mg/kg mercury guideline would benefit residents in countries where rates of fish consumption are significantly higher than in the U.S. Japan, for example, has already adopted a 0.3 mg/kg mercury guideline. In Hong Kong there is a significant correlation (p < 0.05) between male subfertility and the level of mercury in the hair of males between the ages of 25 and 75. Our study of individuals who have been eating mercury contaminated fish steadily for many years suggests that a daily mercury intake of only 0.3 to 0.7 mg/kg body weight may be sufficient to inhibit spermatogenesis in some Hong Kong males. Male subfertility has been correlated with both elevated mercury and the presence of various organochlorines in the diet. To determine whether fish sold in Hong Kong with elevated levels of mercury also had elevated levels of organochlorines we analyzed fish for both mercury and organochlorine content of their dorsal muscle tissue. Because analysis of fish tissue for lipids and a wide range of organochlorines is both very time consuming and expensive, only 15 different species of fish were tested. Organochlorine concentrations were low and there was no correlation between mercury and organochlorine in the 15 fish tested for both organochlorines and mercury. As a result of these tests we concluded that mercury could not be ruled out as the principal causal factor associated with the lack of fertility in Hong Kong males.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9717248     DOI: 10.1016/s0045-6535(98)00006-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Chemosphere        ISSN: 0045-6535            Impact factor:   7.086


  13 in total

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10.  Blood mercury reporting in NHANES: identifying Asian, Pacific Islander, Native American, and multiracial groups.

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