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Banned pollutant's legacy: lower IQ's.


One by-product of the United States' industrial culture is the ubiquitous contamination of the environment-and our bodies-with polychlorinated biphenyls polychlorinated biphenyls, (pol´ēklôr´nā´tid bīfē´n  (PCBs). Exposure to these persistent, now-banned chemicals begins before birth, as a woman's blood delivers to the fetus some of the PCBs stored in her fat. This legacy, even when not unusually large, can impair brain development.

By fifth grade, a new study finds, its effects can show up as diminished IQs.

Joseph L. Jacobson and Sandra W. Jacobson of Wayne State University Wayne State University, at Detroit, Mich.; state supported; coeducational; established 1956 as a successor to Wayne Univ. (formed 1934 by a merger of five city colleges).  in Detroit have followed several hundred Michigan children born in the early 1980s. They stratified stratified /strat·i·fied/ (strat´i-fid) formed or arranged in layers.

strat·i·fied
adj.
Arranged in the form of layers or strata.
 the children into exposure groups, using PCBs in the mothers' breast milk as a gauge of how much of the pollutant the mothers carried.

Once used primarily as insulators in electrical transformers, PCBs now taint most soils and water. Much of the pollutant in the most heavily exposed Michigan children traced to their mothers' having eaten large quantities of Great Lakes fish-notorious for their PCB PCB: see polychlorinated biphenyl.
PCB
 in full polychlorinated biphenyl

Any of a class of highly stable organic compounds prepared by the reaction of chlorine with biphenyl, a two-ring compound.
 contamination.

Earlier studies had shown that children with the highest prenatal PCB exposures exhibited developmental delays, starting in infancy. Though breast-feeding breast-feeding /breast-feed·ing/ (brest´fed?ing) nursing; the feeding of an infant at the mother's breast.  sometimes added substantially to an infant's store of PCBs, only prenatal exposures appeared to affect a young child's development-especially his or her short-term memory short-term memory
n.
Abbr. STM The phase of the memory process in which stimuli that have been recognized and registered are stored briefly.
.

The Jacobsons now describe IQ and achievement test results for 212 Michigan children. While there was no "gross intellectual impairment," they report in the Sept. 12 New England Journal of Medicine The New England Journal of Medicine (New Engl J Med or NEJM) is an English-language peer-reviewed medical journal published by the Massachusetts Medical Society. It is one of the most popular and widely-read peer-reviewed general medical journals in the world. , the average IQ was 6.2 points lower in the 30 11-year-olds who had the highest prenatal PCB exposures (based on at least 1.25 micrograms per gram of fat in their mothers' breast milk) than in children with smaller exposures.

PCBs appear to exert their greatest effect on short-term memory, planning skills, and distractibility, says Joseph Jacobson. Although affected kids "are still in the normal range," he notes, high exposures "are just pulling a lot of them into the bottom of the normal range." In word comprehension, for example, the highly exposed children lagged 6 months behind the other group.

Most of the children are middle-class, says Joseph Jacobson. "I thought that once they reached a structured school environment, whatever minor [PCB-induced] handicaps they had would be overcome. So I was quite surprised to find that, if anything, the effects were stronger and clearer at age 11 than they had been at age 4."

While unexpected, the findings are "plausible," judging by recent data from children born to victims of PCB poisoning (SN: 11/11/95, p. 310), observes Walter J. Rogan of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences The National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) is one of 27 Institutes and Centers of the National Institutes of Health (NIH),which is a component of the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS). The Director of the NIEHS is Dr. David A. Schwartz.  in Research Triangle Park Research Triangle Park, research, business, medical, and educational complex situated in central North Carolina. It has an area of 6,900 acres (2,795 hectares) and is 8 × 2 mi (13 × 3 km) in size. Named for the triangle formed by Duke Univ. , N.C. He notes that even the highest exposures in the Michigan children could occur anywhere in the United States. "The notion of a background substance that everybody's exposed to doing that kind of detectable damage is disturbing." - J. Raloff
COPYRIGHT 1996 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1996, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:it is believed that exposure of pregnant women to polychlorinated biphenyls can cause lower intelligence levels in their children
Author:Raloff, J.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Sep 14, 1996
Words:473
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