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PCB exposure affects antibody response in vaccinated children.


Heilmann C, Grandjean P, Weihe P, Nielsen F, Budtz-Jorgensen E. 2006. Reduced antibody responses to vaccinations in children exposed to polychlorinated biphenyls polychlorinated biphenyls, (pol´ēklôr´nā´tid bīfē´n . PLoS Med 3(8):e311.

Although children are known to display varied antibody responses to vaccination, little is known about the causes of these variations. One possibility is that persistent organochlorine or·gan·o·chlo·rine
n.
Any of various hydrocarbon pesticides, such as DDT, that contain chlorine.
 pollutants such as polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) elicit immunotoxic effects that influence the production of specific antibodies. In this report, NIEHS NIEHS National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIH, DHHS)  grantee An individual to whom a transfer or conveyance of property is made.

In a case involving the sale of land, the buyer is commonly known as the grantee.


grantee n.
 Philippe Grandjean of the Harvard School of Public Health The Harvard School of Public Health is (colloquially, HSPH) is one of the professional graduate schools of Harvard University. Located in Longwood Area of the Boston, Massachusetts neighborhood of Mission Hill, next to Harvard Medical School and Cambridge, Massachusetts,  and his colleagues confirm an association between increased 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.
 exposure and decreased antibody production in vaccinated children.

The researchers looked at two birth cohorts of generally healthy children (119 children at age 18 months and 129 at age 7 years) living in the Faroe Islands of the North Atlantic, where the traditional diet includes whale blubber that may be contaminated with PCBs. The children were examined after receiving routine childhood vaccinations against tetanus and diphtheria diphtheria (dĭfthēr`ēə), acute contagious disease caused by Corynebacterium diphtheriae (Klebs-Loffler bacillus) bacteria that have been infected by a bacteriophage. It begins as a soreness of the throat with fever. . The researchers determined the children's exposure to PCBs by measuring PCB concentrations in their mothers' blood during pregnancy and milk soon after birth, and in the children's own blood at the time of the study.

The researchers used standard regression analysis techniques to determine the effects of PCB exposure on the production of diphtheria and tetanus antibodies in the children. They found that for each doubling of PCB exposure, diphtheria antibody response decreased by 24% in the 18-month-old children. They also saw a 16% reduction of the tetanus antibody response with each doubling of exposure in the older children. Both 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.
 exposure seemed to significantly affect antibody concentrations. Although most of the children's antibody concentrations were well within the range considered necessary to protect against tetanus and diphtheria, the researchers noted diphtheria antibody concentrations below the acceptable limit for long-term protection in 26 of the 7-year-olds two years after receiving a booster vaccination.

Limitations to the study included the small number of children in the two cohorts and the possibility of exposure to other seafood contaminants, such as p,p'-DDE. However, the authors say the findings demonstrate evidence of pollutant influences on reduced antibody production after routine childhood vaccination, which could lower a child's protection against infectious diseases.
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Title Annotation:Immunity
Author:Tillett, Tanya
Publication:Environmental Health Perspectives
Date:Jan 1, 2007
Words:368
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