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Determinants of polychlorinated biphenyls and methylmercury exposure in inuit women of childbearing age. (Articles).


The objectives of this study were to to identify maternal characteristics associated with traditional food consumption and to examine food items associated with polychlorinated biphenyls polychlorinated biphenyls, (pol´ēklôr´nā´tid bīfē´n  (PCBs) and mercury body burden in pregnant Inuit women from Northern Quebec. We interviewed women from three communities at mid-pregnancy and at 1 and 11 months postpartum. We measured PCBs, Hg, and selenium selenium (səlē`nēəm), nonmetallic chemical element; symbol Se; at. no. 34; at. wt. 78.96; m.p. 217°C;; b.p. about 685°C;; sp. gr. 4.81 at 20°C;; valence −2, +4, or +6.  in maternal blood; Hg was also measured in maternal hair. The women reported eating significant amounts of fish, beluga beluga (bəl`gə) or white whale, small, toothed northern whale, Delphinapterus leucas. The beluga may reach a length of 19 ft (5.  muktuk/fat, seal meat, and seal fat. Although consumption of fish and seal was associated with lower socioeconomic status socioeconomic status,
n the position of an individual on a socio-economic scale that measures such factors as education, income, type of occupation, place of residence, and in some populations, ethnicity and religion.
, consumption of beluga whale was uniform across strata. Fish and seal meat consumption was associated with increased Hg concentrations in hair. Traditional food intake during pregnancy was unrelated to 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.
 body burden, which is more a function of lifetime consumption. This study corroborated cor·rob·o·rate  
tr.v. cor·rob·o·rat·ed, cor·rob·o·rat·ing, cor·rob·o·rates
To strengthen or support with other evidence; make more certain. See Synonyms at confirm.
 previous findings relating marine mammal A marine mammal is a mammal that is primarily ocean-dwelling or depends on the ocean for its food. Mammals originally evolved on land, but later marine mammals evolved to live back in the ocean.  and fish consumption to increased Hg and selenium body burden. Despite widespread knowledge regarding the presence of these contaminants in traditional foods, a large proportion of Inuit women increased their consumption of these foods during pregnancy, primarily because of pregnancy-related changes in food preferences and the belief that these foods are beneficial during pregnancy. Key words:. Canada, Inuit, methylmercury, polychlorinated biphenyls. Environ Health Perspect 109:957-963 (2001). [Online 12 September 2001]

http://ehpnet1.niehs.nih.gov/docs/2001/109p957-963muckle/abstract.html

**********

Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) are a family of lipophilic lipophilic,
adj/n the ability to dissolve or attach to lipids.

lipophilic (lipōfil´ik),
adj 1. showing a marked attraction to, or solubility in, lipids.
2.
 compounds once used extensively in industry, particularly as heat transfer chemicals in electric transformers and capacitors as well as hydraulic fluids and lubricants in heavy electrical equipment A piece of electrical equipment is a machine, powered by electricity and usually consists of an enclosure, a variety of electrical components and often a power switch. Examples of Electrical Equipment
  • Cathodic protection rectifier
  • Fire alarm panel
 (1,2). Although banned in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  in the mid-1970s and in most of western Europe Western Europe

The countries of western Europe, especially those that are allied with the United States and Canada in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (established 1949 and usually known as NATO).
 by the mid-1980s, these compounds were designed to resist biodegradation, and they continue to be ubiquitous in landfills, ocean and lake sediments, and fish and wildlife (3). Fatty fish from contaminated contaminated,
v 1. made radioactive by the addition of small quantities of radioactive material.
2. made contaminated by adding infective or radiographic materials.
3. an infective surface or object.
 bodies of water can be a major source of human exposure, as are fatty meats and dairy products dairy products dairy nplproduits laitier

dairy products dairy nplMilchprodukte pl, Molkereiprodukte pl 
. The toxicity of PCBs and related compounds was first recognized in two industrial accidents--one in Japan in the late 1960s, the other in Taiwan in the late 1970s--when PCBs used as a heat transfer agent leaked into rice oil during its manufacture. Adults who ate the contaminated oil developed skin rashes and peripheral nervous system peripheral nervous system: see nervous system.  numbness and tingling Numbness and Tingling Definition

Numbness and tingling are decreased or abnormal sensations caused by altered sensory nerve function.
Description

The feeling of having a foot "fall asleep" is a familiar one.
 (4). Infants born to women who had eaten the contaminated oil also had skin rashes and exhibited poorer intellectual functioning during infancy and childhood (5). Prospective, longitudinal studies longitudinal studies,
n.pl the epidemiologic studies that record data from a respresentative sample at repeated intervals over an extended span of time rather than at a single or limited number over a short period.
 of U.S. and Dutch children exposed prenatally to PCBs have linked this exposure to poorer intellectual function in children exposed at the upper end of general population levels (6,7).

Mercury is a natural element in the earth's crust and a major industrial pollutant, particularly from coal-fired utility plants and waste incinerators. In lakes and oceans, Hg is converted by bacteria to methylmercury (MeHg) and bioaccumulates in fish and in the meat of sea mammals who eat MeHg-contaminated fish (8). The neurotoxicity neurotoxicity /neu·ro·tox·ic·i·ty/ (noor?o-tok-sis´it-e) the quality of exerting a destructive or poisonous effect upon nerve tissue.  of MeHg was first recognized in the 1950s when residents of southern Japan ate fish from Minamata Bay Noun 1. Minamata Bay - a bay on the west coast of Kyushu; in the 1950s industrial wastes caused mercury poisoning among the Japanese people who ate fish from Minamata Bay
Kyushu - the southernmost of the four main islands of Japan; contains coal fields
 that were highly contaminated by industrial pollution. This exposure led to mental retardation mental retardation, below average level of intellectual functioning, usually defined by an IQ of below 70 to 75, combined with limitations in the skills necessary for daily living. , motor damage, ataxia ataxia (ətăk`sēə), lack of coordination of the voluntary muscles resulting in irregular movements of the body. Ataxia can be brought on by an injury, infection, or degenerative disease of the central nervous system, e.g. , and seizures in children born to women who ate the contaminated fish during pregnancy (9). Studies of fish-eating populations exposed to MeHg concentrations somewhat above general population levels conducted in New Zealand New Zealand (zē`lənd), island country (2005 est. pop. 4,035,000), 104,454 sq mi (270,534 sq km), in the S Pacific Ocean, over 1,000 mi (1,600 km) SE of Australia. The capital is Wellington; the largest city and leading port is Auckland.  (10) and the Faroe Islands Faroe Islands
 or Faeroe Islands

Group of islands in the Atlantic Ocean that form a self-governing region of Denmark. Area: 540 sq mi (1,399 sq km). Population: (2002 est.) 47,400.
 (11) have documented subtler cognitive and neuromotor deficits in prenatally exposed children [but cf. Davidson et al. (12)]. In addition to MeHg, increased intake of selenium would be expected in a population such as the Inuit, who consume relatively large quantities of fish and marine mammals marine mammals

mammals inhabiting the sea; generally taken to include the cetaceans (whales, porpoise, dolphin), the sirenians (sea-cows, including manatees and dugong) and the pinnipeds (the carnivores of the group, seals, sealions, walruses).
. Although the effects of Se on MeHg toxicity have not been well documented in humans, there is evidence from animal studies that Se can influence the deposition of MeHg in the body and protect against its toxicity (8).

Organochlorines organochlorines

see chlorinated hydrocarbons.


organochlorines poisoning
cause excitement and irritability, tremor, ataxia, weakness, paralysis, convulsions.
 and heavy metals heavy metals,
n.pl metallic compounds, such as aluminum, arsenic, cadmium, lead, mercury, and nickel. Exposure to these metals has been linked to immune, kidney, and neurotic disorders.
 are carried to the Arctic from industrialized in·dus·tri·al·ize  
v. in·dus·tri·al·ized, in·dus·tri·al·iz·ing, in·dus·tri·al·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To develop industry in (a country or society, for example).

2.
 regions by long-range atmospheric transport, waterways, and oceanic currents (13). Due to their high lipophilicity and resistance to biodegradation, PCBs and other organochlorines bioaccumulate in fatty tissues of organisms and are biomagnified through the food chain, producing relatively heavy concentrations in the fat of predator species, including predator fish and birds, marine mammals, and polar bears (14). Among the heavy metals, Hg reaches the highest concentrations in the northern fauna, through acid rain and contamination from hydroelectric power hydroelectric power: see power, electric; water power.
hydroelectric power

Electricity produced from generators driven by water turbines that convert the energy in falling or fast-flowing water to mechanical energy.
 plants. The Inuit residing in northern Quebec receive an unusually high dose of PCBs because they eat the fat from predator marine mammals such as beluga and seal. Collaborative research by circumpolar cir·cum·po·lar  
adj.
1. Located or found in one of the Polar Regions.

2. Astronomy Denoting a star that from a given observer's latitude does not go below the horizon.
 nations conducted during the past 5 years has documented human exposure to PCBs and Hg, and the Inuit from northern Quebec and Greenland are among the most heavily exposed (15). Before contact with the Europeans, the Inuit were nomadic See nomadic computing.  and subsistence hunters; their diet consisted almost exclusively of meat, fish, fat, and wild berries. Rapid changes in the diet of Nunavik Inuit occurred in the mid-1950s with the advent of policies of compulsory schooling and of concentrating native people into permanent, white-style settlements, creating a more sedentary lifestyle
For anthropology, see sedentism.


Sedentary lifestyle is a type of lifestyle most commonly found in modern (particularly Western) cultures. It is characterized by sitting or remaining inactive for most of the day (for example, in an office.
 and dietary acculturation acculturation, culture changes resulting from contact among various societies over time. Contact may have distinct results, such as the borrowing of certain traits by one culture from another, or the relative fusion of separate cultures.  (16). Now there are at least one and often two grocery stores in each of the Nunavik communities, but store-bought foods are very expensive because of the high cost of transportation to the North. Meat, fish, and fat continue to be consumed by the Inuit and traditional foods continue to contribute significantly to the intake of many nutrients for the Canadian Inuit (17).

We are currently studying the effects of prenatal exposure to PCBs and Hg on cognitive and behavioral development in a sample of Inuit infants in northern Quebec. Mothers are recruited prenatally and interviewed in detail about their consumption of native food. Blood and hair samples are obtained to assess maternal body burdens of PCBs, Hg, and Se. The purpose of this article was 2-fold: to examine the sociodemographic characteristics associated with consumption of traditional food and to identify the food items from the traditional Inuit diet that are associated with PCB and Hg exposure.

Methods

Population. We invited pregnant Inuit women from northern Quebec (Nunavik) to participate in a study focusing on infant health and development. The Nunavik region is located north of the 55th parallel; 7,660 Inuit are scattered along a 2,000-km seashore line along Hudson Bay Hudson Bay, inland sea of North America, c.475,000 sq mi (1,230,000 sq km), c.850 mi (1,370 km) long and c.650 mi (1,050 km) wide, E central Canada. Hudson Bay and James Bay (its southern extension) and all their islands border Nunavut Territory, Manitoba, Ontario, , Hudson Strait Hudson Strait

Arm of the Atlantic Ocean between Baffin Island and northern Quebec, northeastern Canada. Linking Hudson Bay and Foxe Basin with the Labrador Sea, it is about 500 mi (800 km) long and 40–150 mi (65–240 km) wide.
, and Ungava Bay Ungava Bay (ŭng'gä`və, –gā`–), inlet of the Atlantic Ocean, N Que., Canada, extending c.200 mi (320 km) S from Hudson Strait between the N Quebec mainland and the north tip of the Labrador peninsula. , about 1,500 km from Montreal and 2,000 km from the Great Lakes Great Lakes, group of five freshwater lakes, central North America, creating a natural border between the United States and Canada and forming the largest body of freshwater in the world, with a combined surface area of c.95,000 sq mi (246,050 sq km).  in the United States (Figure 1). The Nunavik Inuit live in 14 villages, with 125 to 1,300 inhabitants
:This article is about the video game. For Inhabitants of housing, see Residency
Inhabitants is an independently developed commercial puzzle game created by S+F Software. Details
The game is based loosely on the concepts from SameGame.
 per village. The study participants were living in Puvirnituq (51.8%), Inukjuaq (29.7%), and Kuujjuaraapik (8.5%), the three largest communities on the Hudson Bay coast.

[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]

Procedures and variables. From November 1995 to November 1998, a midwife or a nurse in each of three targeted communities gave our research assistant the name of each pregnant woman shortly after her first prenatal visit. Our research assistant contacted each potential participant by telephone and invited her to come to the community nursing station to learn about the study's objectives and procedures. Women without telephones were contacted by an announcement on the community's FM radio station asking them to contact our research assistant. Detailed informed consent was obtained from each participating mother. The research procedures were approved by the human subjects committees of Laval University Laval University, at Quebec, Que., Canada; Roman Catholic, coeducational, French language; chartered 1852, an outgrowth of a seminary established 1663 by Bishop Laval. In 1876 a branch was established in Montreal, which in 1919 became independent as the Univ.  and 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). . Interviews were conducted in the community's nursing station at midpregnancy and at 1 month postpartum by trained research assistants to assess the mothers' socioeconomic and personal characteristics. The sample examined in this study consisted of the 135 mothers who had completed the prenatal and postnatal postnatal /post·na·tal/ (-na´t'l) occurring after birth, with reference to the newborn.

post·na·tal
adj.
Of or occurring after birth, especially in the period immediately after birth.
 interviews as of November 1998. Among the women recruited for the study during that period, 84.3% agreed to participate; 6.9% were excluded because of miscarriage or perinatal or postnatal mortality; 5.8% were excluded because of failure to obtain biologic samples to document maternal PCB and Hg body burden; and 2.4% withdrew after the prenatal interview.

Traditional food consumption (meals per month during pregnancy) was assessed in an interview conducted during pregnancy, which covered the period from conception to when the prenatal interview was performed, and in an interview conducted postpartum for the period from the prenatal interview to the end of the pregnancy. Consumption rates for the two periods were weighted by the number of days covered in each period and then summed to provide a measure of meals per month during pregnancy. Consumption rates were obtained for the following items selected for their potentially high levels of PCBs or Hg and because they were likely to be the main fish and marine mammals species consumed in Nunavik: fish (primarily Arctic char arctic char also Arctic char
n.
A char (Salvelinus alpinus) native to the fresh waters of Alaska and northern Canada.

Noun 1.
, salmon, and lake trout lake trout
 or Mackinaw trout or Great Lakes trout or salmon trout

Large, voracious char (Salvelinus namaycush) found widely from northern Canada and Alaska to New England and the Great Lakes, usually in deep, cool lakes.
); beluga whale meat, liver, fat, and muktuk muk·tuk  
n.
Whale blubber and skin, eaten as food.



[Inuit maktak.]
 (skin with the underlying fat layer); seal meat, fat, and liver; walrus; whale meat and muktuk; and narwhal narwhal (när`wəl), a small arctic whale, Monodon monoceros. The males of this species, and an occasional female, bear a single, tightly spiraled tusk that measures up to 9 ft (2.7 m) in length.  meat and muktuk.

A 12.5-mL blood sample was obtained from each participating mother at delivery or within several weeks thereafter. Data are reported here only for the 93 women from whom blood samples were obtained within 1 month of delivery (median = 2.0 days postpartum). Any later sampling took place mostly because samples were not collected at delivery. We measured PCB and Hg concentrations in maternal plasma and whole blood, respectively. Two 5-mm diameter hair samples were collected, one at the prenatal interview and one at the 1-month postnatal interview. Hg concentrations were also determined in the hair sample collected postnatally. The hair was cut in three segments of 3 cm in length, with each segment corresponding to a trimester trimester /tri·mes·ter/ (-mes´ter) a period of three months.

tri·mes·ter
n.
A period of three months.


Trimester
The first third or 13 weeks of pregnancy.
 of pregnancy. The samples were long enough to represent the whole pregnancy for all participants except one, whose prenatal sample was used in addition to her postnatal sample. Hair Hg results were available for 107 participants. Because hair Hg concentrations were highly intercorrelated across the three trimesters of pregnancy (median intertrimester r = 0.83), we used the averaged Hg concentration.

Laboratory procedures. Blood samples containing EDTA EDTA: see chelating agents.  as the anticoagulant anticoagulant (ăn'tēkōăg`yələnt), any of several substances that inhibit blood clot formation (see blood clotting).  were centrifuged and the plasma was collected in glass vials prewashed pre·washed  
adj.
Washed by the manufacturer so as to impart a softer texture or faded appearance. Used of textiles or clothing: prewashed denim; prewashed jeans. 
 with hexane hexane /hex·ane/ (hek´san) a saturated hydrogen obtained by distillation from petroleum.

hex·ane
n.
. Hair samples were cut at the scalp and stored in a plastic bag. Plasma samples were frozen at -20 [degrees] C and sent to the Centre de Toxicologie du Quebec for analyses. We first added a 1:1:3 mixture of ammonium sulfate/ethanol/ hexane to the plasma to extract PCB congeners. The extracts were then concentrated and purified on two Florisil columns (60-100 mesh; Fisher Scientific, Nepean, Ontario, Canada). The 14 most prevalent PCB congeners (IUPAC IUPAC: see International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry.  nos. 28, 52, 99, 101, 105, 118, 128, 138, 153, 156, 170, 180, 183, 187) were measured in the purified extracts with an HP 5890 high-resolution gas chromatograph equipped with dual capillary columns (HP Ultra I and Ultra II) and dual Ni-63 electron capture detectors (Hewlett-Packard, Palo Alto, CA, USA). Quality control procedures were described previously (18). Percent recovery for PCB congeners varied from 92% to 98%; the detection limit was about 0.02 [micro]g/L for all congeners. Coefficients of variation (n = 20, different days) ranged from 2.1% to 7.5%. Bias--that is, the difference between the concentration of the reference material and the concentration found using the analytic method--ranged from-10.9% to 3.8%. We measured total cholesterol, free cholesterol, and triglycerides Triglycerides
Fatty compounds synthesized from carbohydrates during the process of digestion and stored in the body's adipose (fat) tissues. High levels of triglycerides in the blood are associated with insulin resistance.
 in plasma samples by standard enzymatic procedures, and we determined phospholipids according to the enzymatic method of Takayama et al. (19), using a commercial kit (Wako Pure Chemical Industries, Richmond, VA). We estimated the concentration of total plasma lipids according to the formula developed by Phillips et al. (20). PCB concentrations were expressed on lipid basis because maternal wet-weight concentrations are less reliable due to blood lipid fluctuations during pregnancy, from pregnancy to the delivery, from pregnancy to the postpartum period, and between bottle-feeding and breast-feeding breast-feeding /breast-feed·ing/ (brest´fed?ing) nursing; the feeding of an infant at the mother's breast.  mothers (21,22,23). The laboratory of the Centre de Toxicologie du Quebec is accredited accredited

recognition by an appropriate authority that the performance of a particular institution has satisfied a prestated set of criteria.


accredited herds
cattle herds which have achieved a low level of reactors to, e.g.
 by the Canadian Association for Environmental Analytical Laboratories.

We determined total Hg concentrations in samples of whole maternal blood and hair by cold-vapor atomic absorption spectrometry Absorption spectrometry
A scientific procedure to determine chemical makeup of samples.

Mentioned in: Herbalism, Traditional Chinese
. Samples were digested with nitric acid nitric acid, chemical compound, HNO3, colorless, highly corrosive, poisonous liquid that gives off choking red or yellow fumes in moist air. It is miscible with water in all proportions. , Hg was reduced with anhydrous an·hy·drous
adj.
Without water, especially water of crystallization.


anhydrous (anhī´drus),
adj without water.


anhydrous

containing no water.
 stannous chloride, and the reaction was catalyzed with cadmium chloride. Metallic mercury was volatilized vol·a·til·ize  
intr. & tr.v. vol·a·til·ized, vol·a·til·iz·ing, vol·a·til·iz·es
1. To become or make volatile.

2. To evaporate or cause to evaporate.
 and detected by atomic absorption spectrometry (model 120, Pharmacia, Piscataway, NJ, USA). Detection limit for blood mercury analysis was 1.0 nmol/L. Quality control procedures were described previously (18). Coefficients of variation (n = 50, different days) at levels of 40 and 90 nmol/L (in-house reference materials) were 5% and 5.5%, respectively. Relative bias was 2.4% and-0.4%, respectively. Detection limit for hair Hg analysis was 1 nmol/g. We obtained accuracy and precision data using certified reference material through a hair mercury interlaboratory comparison program organized by Health Canada. Coefficients of variation (n = 50, different days) were 4.8% for the 12.3 [micro]g/g reference specimen (CRM (Customer Relationship Management) An integrated information system that is used to plan, schedule and control the presales and postsales activities in an organization.  397) (24) and 4.3% for the 4.42 [micro]g/g reference specimen (CRM 13) (25). Relative biases were -2.2% and +1.9%.

We determined blood Se concentrations by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry ICP-MS (Inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry) is a type of mass spectrometry that is highly sensitive and capable of the determination of a range of metals and several non-metals at concentrations below one part in 1012.  (ICP-MS ICP-MS Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectroscopy ) using state-of-the-art instrumentation (Elan 6000; Perkin Elmer, Shelton, CT, USA). Samples were simply diluted and aspirated into the instrument. We performed matrix-matched calibration using a pool of normal blood, and we obtained accuracy and precision data using reference material of our ICP-MS comparison program. The detection limit was 0.1 [micro]mol/L. The coefficient of variation Coefficient of Variation

A measure of investment risk that defines risk as the standard deviation per unit of expected return.
 (n = 37, different days) at a level of 2.7 [micro]mol/L was 5.9%, and the bias was -0.4%.

Statistical analysis. Consumption of traditional food during pregnancy, blood PCB concentration, hair Hg at first trimester of pregnancy, and blood Se concentration followed lognormal distributions. Therefore, we conducted analyses involving these variables with log-transformed values. We performed Pearson correlations to identify maternal characteristics associated with traditional food consumption as well as traditional food items associated with PCB and Hg body burden. We conducted multiple linear regression Linear regression

A statistical technique for fitting a straight line to a set of data points.
 analyses to model the sociodemographic characteristics associated with traditional food consumption.

Results

Sample characteristics are presented in Table 1. The sample was predominantly poorly educated and of lower socioeconomic status. Only 4% had completed high school. A large proportion (42%) of the women were receiving more than half of their financial support from parents or step-parents. With respect to age, 16% were younger than 18 years and 4% were older than 35. Among women living with a partner (64%), the partner's fishing and hunting activities ranged from rare (0-6 times/year, 20%) to very frequent (1-7 times/week, 40%), with a median of 30 times/year. Twenty-three percent of the participating women were primiparous pri·mip·a·ra  
n. pl. pri·mip·a·ras or pri·mip·a·rae
1. A woman who is pregnant for the first time.

2. A woman who has given birth to only one child.
, and 33% had already delivered three or more children. Most women (92%) smoked during pregnancy. Most interviews were conducted in English (68%) or French (13%); 19% of the women were interviewed in Inuktitut through an interpreter.

The women ate fish often during pregnancy (Table 2). Most ate fish at least once per week; 32.6% ate three to six fish meals weekly, and 9.2% ate fish daily. Beluga fat/muktuk was the sea mammal food most frequently consumed, followed by seal meat and seal fat. Beluga meat and seal liver were consumed less frequently. Consumption of beluga liver, narwhal, and walrus was rare; only 1, 2, and 6 women ate more than 3 meals of beluga liver, narwhal, and walrus, respectively, during pregnancy. The intercorrelations among the traditional food items were modest, ranging from 0.11 to 0.45 (median = 0.28). The highest Pearson correlation coefficients were obtained for consumption of products from the same animal; individuals who ate beluga fat/muktuk were more likely also to consume beluga meat (r = 0.44, p [less than or equal to] 0.000), and individuals eating seal liver were more likely to consume seal meat (r = 0.45, p [less than or equal to] 0.000). Correlations between fish and beluga fat/muktuk were lower (r = 0.34, p [less than or equal to] 0.000), as were the correlations between fish and seal meat (r = 0.11, p [less than or equal to] 0.19), and between beluga fat/muktuk and seal meat (r = 0.28, p [less than or equal to] 0.001). Unexpectedly, a large proportion of women reported increasing their consumption of these foods during pregnancy. As shown in Table 3, the main reasons given for this increase were changes in appetite and food preferences during pregnancy and the belief that traditional food consumption would enhance health during pregnancy. The main reason given by women who decreased their intake of traditional food during pregnancy was lack of availability. Only one woman reported reducing her intake to avoid exposure to environmental contaminants.

Concentrations of contaminants in maternal blood and hair are presented in Table 4. The intercorrelations among PCBs, Hg, and Se are presented in Table 5. The relative proportion of the individual PCB congeners was uniform across this cohort. The correlations between PCB congener congener /con·ge·ner/ (kon´je-ner) something closely related to another thing, as a member of the same genus, a muscle having the same function as another, or a chemical compound closely related to another in composition and exerting  153 and the other congeners detected in at least 70% of samples were high and ranged from 0.84 to 0.99 (data not shown). As in all other cohorts studied to date, PCB 153 was the most prevalent congener; it represented 35% of the 14 PCB congeners that were measured. Because estimates of total PCB body burden are derived by summing different PCB congeners in different studies, PCB 153 provides the best metric for comparing PCB exposure across studies and was therefore used as a surrogate for total PCB concentration in this cohort. PCB concentrations were moderately correlated with hair Hg concentrations but unrelated to blood Hg and Se. Hair and blood Hg levels were strongly associated, and Hg concentrations in both media were moderately related to blood Se levels.

We examined the demographic characteristics associated with traditional food consumption first in univariate correlational analyses. Characteristics that were associated with a given type of food (at p [less than or equal to] 0.10) we then included as predictors in multiple linear regression analyses (Table 6). When two predictors were moderately correlated to each other (r [greater than or equal to] 0.40), only the stronger predictor was included in the model to minimize multicollinearity. With this criterion, maternal education and PPVT-R PPVT-R Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test-Revised  (r = 0.49) (24), socioeconomic status (25) and PPVT-R (r = 0.43), adoption status and breast-feeding duration (r = -0.53), marital status marital status,
n the legal standing of a person in regard to his or her marriage state.
 and living with parents (r = -0.55), as well as maternal age maternal age,
n the age of the mother at the period of conception.
 and living with parents (r = -0.43) were too highly correlated to be included in the same regression analysis In statistics, a mathematical method of modeling the relationships among three or more variables. It is used to predict the value of one variable given the values of the others. For example, a model might estimate sales based on age and gender. . The analyses in Table 6 showed that women who ate fish were likely to be less educated, to share their house with a larger number of adults, to live in more crowded households, to smoke more cigarettes daily, and less likely to give their baby up for adoption. This model explained 28% of the variance of frequency of fish consumption during pregnancy.

In contrast, maternal demographic characteristics were worse predictors of beluga and seal consumption (variance explained ranged from 2% to 8%). The number of cigarettes smoked daily during pregnancy was the only significant predictor of beluga meat consumption. Seal fat consumption was associated with residential crowding and was more frequent among women who did not give their baby up for adoption--that is, women who were single, younger, and living with their parents. Seal meat consumption was related to lower socioeconomic status. Finally, seal liver consumption was more frequent among women who spoke English or French well enough to be interviewed in one of these languages, as well as among women who did not give their baby up for adoption.

As shown in Table 7, reported fish and marine mammal consumption during pregnancy was unrelated to maternal PCB body burden. Correlation coefficients that were similar in magnitude were obtained when the sum of 14 PCB congeners was used instead of PCB congener 153 (data not shown). Consumption of fish, seal meat, and seal liver during pregnancy was moderately associated with maternal hair Hg concentration. Surprisingly, these food items were not associated with blood Hg concentration, even though blood and hair Hg levels were highly correlated. Beluga fat/muktuk was an important source of Se intake during pregnancy.

Discussion

For several decades, the diet of aboriginal Northerners has consisted of a mix of traditional food and imported, store-bought food. Every community in Nunavik has at least one grocery store and usually two. A large majority of the pregnant women from the three largest Hudson Bay communities reported eating fish weekly, and a significant number ate fish daily. Beluga fat/muktuk was the most frequently consumed marine mammal food, followed by seal meat, fat, and liver and beluga meat. Beluga liver, narwhal, and walrus consumption was rare. More frequent fish consumption was associated with lower socioeconomic status; frequent fish eaters were likely to be less educated, to share their house with more adults, and to live in more crowded conditions. This association probably stems from the fact that fish, which are usually caught by a family member and available at no cost in a community freezer, are less expensive than store-bought foods.

By contrast, beluga meat and muktuk/fat consumption were unrelated to the mother's socioeconomic circumstances, suggesting that consumption of these foods during pregnancy is valued across socioeconomic strata. Fisheries and Oceans Canada Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO), is the department within the government of Canada that is responsible for developing and implementing policies and programs in support of Canada's economic, ecological and scientific interests in oceans and inland waters.  outlaws beluga hunting in the northern river estuaries at certain times of the year and fixes a quota on the number of belugas the Inuit are allowed to hunt per community each year. When a hunter brings back a beluga whale to the community, after his family members have consumed their part of the animal, the whole community is usually invited to the feast on the shore. The animals caught are consumed right away, and beluga is never available in community freezers. Beluga consumption is therefore more likely to be determined by a woman's cultural values, participation in social activities, and belonging to a beluga hunter's family, which may explain why married, older women tend to eat more beluga meat during pregnancy. On the other hand, seal meat consumption is associated with poorer socioeconomic circumstances although to a lesser degree than fish. Because there is no restriction regarding seal hunting, and because consumption of this marine mammal is less culturally valued in Nunavik, seal is readily available in community freezers (28).

Surprisingly, except for beluga meat, maternal age was unrelated to fish and marine mammal consumption, which is inconsistent with data from the Inuit Health Survey conducted with Nunavik adult men and nonpregnant women in 1992, where older adults were found to consume these foods significantly more often (29). The narrower age range of the women studied here may have reduced the likelihood of observing an association. The increase in consumption of traditional food during pregnancy reported by a substantial proportion of these women is likely to have further reduced the correlation with age. As shown in Table 3, these changes in the diet reflect cultural beliefs about which foods are most beneficial for a pregnant woman and her baby, as well as food cravings and preferences experienced by Inuit women during pregnancy. Despite widespread knowledge in the community about the presence of these contaminants in traditional food, it is clear from the data that the presence of contaminants has little or no impact on the diet of these pregnant women. Community radio programs presented regularly by Inuit midwives promote the consumption of traditional food based on the traditional knowledge that it is the best food for better health.

A correlation between blood PCB and Hg concentrations was expected but not observed in this data set. Moderate to high PCB-Hg correlations have been reported in umbilical cord blood umbilical cord blood Transplantation A source of primitive and stem cells that can be used to reconstitute BM destroyed by aplastic anemia or by RT or chemotherapy for CA, lymphoproliferative malignancies. See Bone marrow transplantation, Stem cell therapy.  samples from southern Quebec (r = 0.58), as well as in blood samples collected from Nunavik adult men and nonpregnant women (r ranged from 0.60 to 0.70 depending on the PCB congener) (18,29). Dietary changes during pregnancy, in favor of increased consumption of Hg-contaminated foods, would be expected to affect maternal Hg body burdens through the short half-life of Hg in the bloodstream, which could reduce the strength of the PCB-Hg association. Changes in consumption of PCB-contaminated foods are less likely to affect this association because the body burden of the more highly chlorinated chlorinated /chlo·ri·nat·ed/ (klor´i-nat?ed) treated or charged with chlorine.

chlorinated

charged with chlorine.


chlorinated acids
some, e.g.
 PCB congeners found in this population is determined primarily by lifetime consumption (30) because of the long half-life and slow excretion rate of these contaminants. Active uptake of Hg from the mother's blood across the placenta placenta (pləsĕn`tə) or afterbirth, organ that develops in the uterus during pregnancy. It is a unique characteristic of the higher (or placental) mammals. In humans it is a thick mass, about 7 in.  (8) may also reduce the strength of the PCB-Hg association because it is likely that women vary in rate of transplacental transplacental /trans·pla·cen·tal/ (-plah-sen´tal) through the placenta.

trans·pla·cen·tal
adj.
Relating to or involving passage through or across the placenta.
 transfer.

Not surprisingly, Hg blood and hair concentrations were moderately correlated. The strength of this association was expected to be in the 0.60-0.80 range but not higher because the hair Hg concentration reflects the average exposure across the 9 months of gestation, whereas the blood Hg concentration primarily reflects exposure during the previous 2 months. The strength of the Se-Hg association obtained is in the expected range and is consistent with the assumption that similar food sources are responsible for Se and Hg intake.

Several lines of evidence suggest that the fish and marine mammal species consumed in the Arctic by the Inuit should affect their PCB body burden. In the Faroe Islands population consuming pilot whale pilot whale

Any of one to three species (genus Globicephala, family Delphinidae) of toothed whale found in all oceans except the Arctic and Antarctic, also called caa'ing whale for a roaring sound it makes when stranded.
, PCB concentrations from maternal serum analyses collected at 34 weeks of pregnancy were correlated with increased consumption of fish (r = 0.18), whale meat (r = 0.27), and whale blubber (r = 0.40) (30). In a group of women consuming PCB-contaminated Lake Michigan fish over an average period of 16 years (31), cumulative fish consumption was correlated with PCB concentrations in maternal blood collected after delivery (r = 0.29). The strongest correlation was observed with the highest annual rate of fish consumption (r = 0.38), suggesting that lifetime consumption was the best predictor of PCB body burden. Moreover, PCB analysis performed on seal fat, beluga muktuk/fat, and Arctic char caught in Nunavik indicated that the PCB content was high in beluga fat (1,002 ng/g, n = 16) compared with the levels found in seal fat (527 ng/g, n = 16) and in Arctic char (152 ng/g, n = 9) (14). Similar results were obtained in seal fat from eastern Nunavik (762 ng/g, n = 41) (32). In light of these findings, it is surprising that fish and marine mammal consumption during pregnancy was unrelated to maternal PCB body burden in this cohort. The information gathered on traditional food consumption during pregnancy did not necessarily reflect maternal lifetime consumption patterns. Moreover, the changes in traditional food intake reported by a large proportion of these mothers (Table 3) further reduced the likelihood of observing this association. These data suggest that food consumption should probably not be monitored during pregnancy to attempt to identify highly PCB-exposed Inuit women.

Whale fat is the food consumed by Nunavik Inuit and the Faroe Islands populations that is most contaminated by PCBs. Even though the monthly whale fat consumption during pregnancy is remarkably similar in these two groups (Nunavik: 1 meal = 18.0%; at least 2 meals = 37%. Faroe Islands: 1 meal = 18.5%; at least 2 meals = 34.3%), our study failed to confirm the whale fat consumption-blood PCB correlation observed in the Faroe Islands study. One important difference between the Nunavik and the Faroe Islands cohorts was the number of food items responsible for an increased PCB body burden. Although pilot whale is the only significant source of PCB exposure in the Faroese population who did not eat any other marine mammals, other PCB-contaminated marine mammals are consumed in Nunavik. Another important difference between the two cohorts was related to years of education; 97% of the Faroe Islands mothers had at least 9 years of education (33), compared with only 54% of the Nunavik women. It may be more difficult for less educated women to quantify and summarize their food consumption patterns. In fact, consumption of beluga fat/muktuk and blood PCB concentrations calculated only for mothers with at least 9 years of education correlated as expected (r = 0.21), although this association was not significant because the sample size was small (n = 37).

As in the Faroe Islands study, maternal hair Hg concentrations were correlated with consumption of fish and sea mammal meat (30). As expected, traditional food consumption during pregnancy was more strongly correlated with hair Hg than with blood Hg concentration, presumably pre·sum·a·ble  
adj.
That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster.
 because the hair sample reflects the entire pregnancy, whereas the blood sample primarily reflects more recent Hg intake. Moreover, MeHg, which is the main form of the Hg found in fish, accounts for a larger proportion of Hg in hair than in blood (8). Dewailly et al. (34) also found an association between blood Hg and traditional food consumption, which was not seen in this cohort. The lower frequency of beluga meat and beluga fat/muktuk consumption in this younger group of Inuit pregnant women may have reduced the likelihood of confirming the association found by Dewailly et al. in older Inuit adults. Methodologic differences regarding the assessment of food consumption (24-hr recall and portion size in Dewailly's study vs. food frequency over a longer period in current study) may also explain this discrepancy. Beluga fat/muktuk consumption was associated with increased maternal blood Se concentrations, a relation also seen in the Faroe Islands population (30). In a recent study, of 23 traditional food items consumed by the Nunavik women, beluga meat and skin consumption was the most important source of Se intake, and the contribution of fish and seal consumption to Se intake was about 10 times lower than that of the beluga meat and skin (35).
Table 1. Characteristics of participants.

Characteristics                  No.   Percent   Mean    SD     Range

Education (years)                135              8.7    1.6    6-13
Socioeconomic status (a)         135             25.5   10.2    8-50
  Unskilled laborers                    31.1
  Semiskilled workers                   31.1
  Skilled crafts, clerical,             31.1
    and sales
  Technical, small business,             6.7
    professional
Marital status (% single)        135    30.5
Age (years)                      135             24.3    5.8    14-41
Frequency of partner's hunting    73             56.5   61.0     0-361
    and fishing (b)
    (times/year)
Number of adults in household    135              2.5    1.6     0-9
Residential crowding (c)         107              1.3    0.3   0.6-2.4
PPVT-R (d)                       127             61.7   30.9    11-146
Language of interview (%         135    19.3
    Inuktitut)
Smoking (number of               125             11.0    6.4     1-25
    cigarettes/day) (e)
Adoption status (% adopted       135    14.8
    infants)
Live with parents (%)            135    43.0

SD, standard deviation.

(a) Hollingshead Index (26) for the mother and her partner or, if she
was not self-supporting, for her primary source of support (usually
her parents).

(b) Only for women living with a partner involved in fishing and
hunting activities.

(c) Number of adults and children in house/number of rooms in house.

(d) Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test, Revised [PPVT-R (27)].

(e) Among smokers.
Table 2. Traditional food consumption during pregnancy (n = 135). (a)

                                                  At          At
                             Meals/week         least 1     least 1
                                                 meal/       meal/
Food                      Mean   SD    Range    week (%)   month (%)

Fish meals                3.3    3.3   0-21.0     77.7       94.1
Beluga meals
  Beluga fat and muktuk   0.5    0.9   0-5.63     17.8       43.0
  Beluga meat             0.1    0.4   0-4.16      1.5       14.8
  Beluga liver            0.0    0.0   0-0.39      0.0        0.7
Seal meals
  Seal fat                0.3    0.8   0-5.16      9.6       25.9
  Seal meat               0.4    0.9   0-6.86      9.6       37.0
  Seal liver              0.1    0.3   0-1.96      2.2       14.8

(a) For women who had completed the prenatal and the postnatal
interviews.
Table 3. Reasons given for changes in traditional
food consumption during pregnancy.

Reasons                                   No.       %

Increased                                51        42.1
  Health related
    Baby's health                        13        10.7
    Mother's health                       1         0.8
    Recommended by parents and elders     2         1.7
    Health, reason unspecified            5         4.1
  Appetite and food preference
    Taste for it (craving)                8         6.6
    More hungry                          11         9.1
    Reduces nausea and stomachache        4         3.3
    More readily available                4         3.3
    Reason not specified                  3         2.5
Decreased                                15        12.3
  Health related
    Avoid contaminants                    1         0.8
  Appetite,and food preference
    No taste for it                       1         0.8
    Less hungry                           1         0.8
    Increases nausea                      2         1.7
    Less readily available                5         4.1
    Reason not specified                  5         4.1
No change                                55        45.6
Total                                   121 (a)   100

(a) Question was not asked of the first 14 women.
Table 4. PCB, Hg, and Se concentrations.

                                Arith-
                                metic
Concentrations            No.    mean    Median    SD        Range

PCB congener 153           93     1.3      0.8      1.2     0.2-6.1
    ([micro]g/L)
PCB congener 153           93   144.9    102.6    126.8   18.9-709.0
    ([micro]g/kg) (a)
Sum of 14 PCB congeners    93     3.6      2.4      3.2    0.6-15.8
    ([micro]g/L)
Sum of 14 PCB congeners    93   414.5    294.1    245.9   71.3-1951.3
    ([micro]g/kg) (a)
Hair Hg ([micro]g/g)
  1st trimester           108     4.3      3.7      3.1    0.2-18.5
  2nd trimester           108     4.6      4.0      3.2    0.4-16.3
  3rd trimester           109     4.4      4.1      2.6    0.3-12.8
  Averaged across         107     4.5      4.0      2.8    0.3-14.0
    trimesters
Blood Hg (nmol/L)          74    59.1     48.0     36.8   17.0-221.0
Se ([micro]mol/L)          74     4.3      4.0      1.8    2.3-12.4

(a) Fat basis.
Table 5. Intercorrelations among PCB, Hg, and Se concentrations.

                PCB
Concen-       congener
trations         153         Hair Hg         Blood Hg           Se

PCB con-      1.00 (93)   0.32 (*) (66)   0.13 (73)        0.09 (73)
  gener 153
Hair Hg                   1.00 (66)       0.68 (**) (59)   0.39 ** (59)
Blood Hg                                  1.00 (74)        0.36 ** (74)
Se                                                         1.00 (74)

Values are Pearson correlation coefficients; sample sizes are in
parentheses.

* p [less than or equal to] 0.01;

** p [less than or equal to] 0.005.
Table 6. Regression analyses to identify demographic characteristics
associated with traditional food consumption during pregnancy.

                                                  Standardized

Traditional           Demographic                               Multi-
   food       No.   characteristics      Pearson r    [beta]    ple R

Fish          107   Maternal education    -0.30 **   -0.26 **
                    No. of adults in
                      residence            0.18 **    0.24 **
                    Residential
                      crowding             0.19 **    0.24 **
                    No. of cigarettes/
                      day                  0.25 **    0.26 **
                    Adoption status       -0.20 **   -0.25 **    0.53
Beluga fat    135   No. of cigarettes/
                      day                  0.15 **    0.15 *     0.15
Beluga meat   135   Marital status         0.15 **    0.11
                    Maternal age           0.17 **    0.12
                    No. of cigarettes/
                      day                  0.20 **    0.18 **    0.27
Seal fat      107   Residential
                      crowding             0.17 **    0.17 *
                    Adoption status       -0.16 **   -0.16 *     0.24
Seal meat     127   Socioeconomic
                      status              -0.21 **   -0.13
                    PPVT-R                -0.23 **   -0.16 *
                    Adoption status       -0.13 **   -0.11       0.28
Seal liver    135   Language of
                      interview            0.14 **    0.15 *
                    Adoption status       -0.16 **   -0.16 *     0.22

* p [less than or equal to] 0.10;

** p [less than or equal to] 0.05.
Table 7. Correlations between consumption of selected traditional food
items during pregnancy and PCB, mercury, and selenium concentrations.

                    PCB congener 153    Hair Hg    Blood Hg      Se
Traditional food        (n = 90)       (n = 107)   (n =70)    (n = 70)

Fish                     -0.06          0.20 *      -0.09      -0.01
Beluga muktuk/fat         0.13          0.10         0.04       0.29 **
Beluga meat               0.15          0.10         0.08       0.15
Seal fat                  0.02          0.05         0.07       0.01
Seal meat                 0.13          0.28 **      0.08       0.02
Seal liver                0.03          0.37 **      0.08       0.16

Values are Pearson correlation coefficients.

* p [less than or equal to] 0.05;

** p [less than or equal to] 0.005.


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Process of bringing forth a child from the uterus, ending pregnancy. It has three stages.
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Gina Muckle, (1) Pierre Ayotte, (1) Eric Dewailly, (1) Sandra W. Jacobson, (2) and Joseph L. Jacobson (3)

(1) Department of Social and Preventive Medicine The Department of Social and Preventive Medicine (popularly known as SPM) is one of 22 teaching departments in the Faculty of Medicine, University of Malaya. It was formed in 1964, one year after the founding of the Faculty of Medicine in the University of Malaya in Kuala Lumpur. , Laval University and Public Health Research Unit, CHUQ CHUQ Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Quebec (Canada)  Research Center (CHUL CHUL Centre Hospitalier de l'Université Laval (Québec, Canada) ), Beauport, Quebec, Canada; (2) Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neurosciences, School of Medicine, Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan, USA; (3) Department of Psychology, Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan, USA

Address correspondence to G. Muckle, Public Health Research Unit, CHUQ Research Center (CHUL), 2400 D'Estimauville, Beauport, Quebec G1E 7G9, Canada. Telephone: (418) 666-7000, ext. 360. Fax (418) 666-2776. E-mail: gina.muckle@crchul.ulaval.ca

We are grateful to the Nunavik population and health care professionals for their collaboration; the Nunavik Nutrition and Health Committee, Municipal Councils, Pauktuutit Inuit Women's and Nunalituqait Ikaluqatigiitut Associations for their support; and E. Lachance, C. Bouffard, K. Poitras, C. Vezina, L. Chiodo, and B. Tuttle for their assistance.

This study was funded by grant R01-ES07902 from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences/NIH and grants from Indian and Northern Affairs Canada The Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development (FIP: Indian and Northern Affairs Canada, French: Affaires indiennes et du Nord Canada, DIAND  (Northern Contaminants Program), Health Canada, and Hydro-Quebec (Environmental Child Health Initiative).

Received 9 January 2001; accepted 14 March 2001.
COPYRIGHT 2001 National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Jacobson, Joseph L.
Publication:Environmental Health Perspectives
Date:Sep 1, 2001
Words:7184
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