Water arsenic exposure and children's intellectual function in Araihazar, Bangladesh.Exposure to arsenic has long been known to have neurologic consequences in adults, but to date there are no well-controlled studies in children. We report results of a cross-sectional investigation of intellectual function in 201 children 10 years of age whose parents participate in our ongoing prospective cohort study A cohort study is a form of longitudinal study used in medicine and social science. It is one type of study design. In medicine, it is usually undertaken to obtain evidence to try to refute the existence of a suspected association between cause and disease; failure to refute examining health effects of As exposure in 12,000 residents of Araihazar, Bangladesh. Water As and manganese manganese (măng`gənēs, măn`–) [Lat.,=magnet], metallic chemical element; symbol Mn; at. no. 25; at. wt. 54.938; m.p. about 1,244°C;; b.p. about 1,962°C;; sp. gr. 7.2 to 7. concentrations of tube wells at each child's home were obtained by surveying all wells in the study region. Children and mothers came to our field clinic, where children received a medical examination in which weight, height, and head circumference were measured. Children's intellectual function on tests drawn from the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children Wechsler intelligence scale for children n. A standardized intelligence test that is used for assessing children from 5 to 15 years old. , version III, was assessed by summing weighted items across domains to create Verbal, Performance, and Full-Scale raw scores. Children provided urine specimens for measuring urinary As and creatinine creatinine /cre·at·i·nine/ (kre-at´i-nin) an anhydride of creatine, the end product of phosphocreatine metabolism; measurements of its rate of urinary excretion are used as diagnostic indicators of kidney function and muscle mass. and were asked to provide blood samples for measuring blood lead and hemoglobin hemoglobin (hē`məglō'bĭn), respiratory protein found in the red blood cells (erythrocytes) of all vertebrates and some invertebrates. concentrations. Exposure to As from drinking water drinking water supply of water available to animals for drinking supplied via nipples, in troughs, dams, ponds and larger natural water sources; an insufficient supply leads to dehydration; it can be the source of infection, e.g. leptospirosis, salmonellosis, or of poisoning, e.g. was associated with reduced intellectual function after adjustment for sociodemographic covariates and water Mn. Water As was associated with reduced intellectual function, in a dose-response manner, such that children with water As levels > 50 [micro]g/L achieved significantly lower Performance and Full-Scale scores than did children with water As levels < 5.5 [micro]g/L. The association was generally stronger for well-water As than for urinary As. Key words: arsenic, children, IQ. ********** In Bangladesh, approximately 30-40 million people (British Geological Survey The British Geological Survey (BGS) is a partly publicly-funded body which aims to advance geoscientific knowledge of the United Kingdom landmass and its continental shelf by means of systematic surveying, monitoring and research. 2001) have been chronically exposed to high concentrations of naturally occurring arsenic in drinking water, supplied by approximately 10 million tube wells (British Geological Survey 2001; van Geen et al. 2002). Aside from carcinogenic carcinogenic having a capacity for carcinogenesis. and vascular effects, the literature contains reports (e.g., Rodriguez et al. 2003) of neurologic consequences of acute and chronic exposure in adults, although the dosimetry dosimetry /do·sim·e·try/ (do-sim´e-tre) scientific determination of amount, rate, and distribution of radiation emitted from a source of ionizing radiation, in biological d. is poorly described. Clinical and industrial reports of heavy exposure in adults (Bolla-Wilson and Bleecker 1987; Morton and Caron 2003) document adverse impacts on a range of cognitive functions, including learning, memory, and concentration, as well as peripheral and central neuropathies (Morton and Dunnette 1994; Pershagen et al. 1981; Schoolmeester and White 1980). In addition to elevated As concentrations in Bangladesh groundwater, the British Geological Survey (2001) has reported that many of the existing wells in Bangladesh also have manganese concentrations that exceed the World Health Organization (WHO) standard of 500 [micro]g/L. Occupational Mn exposure has been associated with neurologic sequelae sequelae Clinical medicine The consequences of a particular condition or therapeutic intervention in adults, specifically Parkinsonism (Gorell et al. 1999). Given the absence of a significant research base concerning the consequences of AS or Mn in children, we sought to examine the possible associations between As exposure and intellectual function, taking into account possible effects of Mn. In 2000, we began a prospective study of the health effects of As in 12,000 adult residents of Araihazar, Bangladesh. The study site, a 25-[km.sup.2] region located approximately 30 km east of Dhaka, was chosen because of its wide range of As concentrations in drinking water. Our survey of 6,000 contiguous wells in the region (van Geen et al. 2003b) revealed that 75% exceed the WHO As standard of 10 [micro]g/L and 53% exceed the Bangladesh standard of 50 [micro]g/L; water As concentrations ranged from < 1 to 900 [micro]g/L. In an analysis of a subset of 629 well-water samples, 82% exceeded the WHO Mn standard (Cheng et al. 2004). In the same region, we are examining the consequences of As exposure on children's health Children's Health Definition Children's health encompasses the physical, mental, emotional, and social well-being of children from infancy through adolescence. . We report here the results of a cross-sectional investigation of intellectual function in 201 children 10 years of age. Materials and Methods Overview. The present project is part of a larger ongoing multidisciplinary study by health, earth, and social scientists working collaboratively in Araihazar, Bangladesh. People in Araihazar, as in most of rural Bangladesh, live in houses with cement or mud floors and tin or straw walls and roofs. Members of extended families live in clusters of individual houses (called a bari), surrounded by family farmland. Each bari has one or more tube wells, usually owned by a senior family member. This region is not particularly poor by Bangladesh standards. Given the absence of a research base concerning the effects of As on children's intellectual functioning, we extrapolated our assessment plan from experience gained in 12 years of studying lead exposure in Kosovo, Yugoslavia (e.g., Factor-Litvak et al. 1999). That research, consistent with the findings of others, documented adverse impact of Pb exposure on intellectual development, with effects stronger on visuomotor visuomotor /vis·uo·mo·tor/ (-mo´ter) pertaining to connections between visual and motor processes. vis·u·o·mo·tor adj. Of or relating to motor activity dependent on or involving sight. than on verbal functioning. Subjects. Of the 11,749 adults enrolled in our cohort study, we selected at random a pool of 400 of their children (using 400 different wells) between 9.5 and 10.5 years of age. During summer of 2002, field staff visited families at home to verify child age and school attendance, to discuss the proposed study, and to make an appointment for a clinic visit. Of the initial pool of 400, 176 children were assessed during the summer of 2002. Informed parental consent Parental consent laws (also known as parental involvement or parental notification laws) in some countries require that one or more parents consent to or be notified before their minor child can legally engage in certain activities. and assent of the children were obtained. The study was approved by the Bangladesh Medical Research Council and the Columbia University Columbia University, mainly in New York City; founded 1754 as King's College by grant of King George II; first college in New York City, fifth oldest in the United States; one of the eight Ivy League institutions. institutional review board. Of the remaining 224 potential study children, 105 were never visited because seasonal flooding made access hazardous; of those visited, 14 families refused participation and 8 were excluded because the child was not attending school or was > 10.5 years of age (n = 33), the family was not at home, or other, unspecified reasons (n = 64). To bolster our sample size, in 25 instances when a home visit identified an excluded child, interviewers selected a child of participating parents from the same village until 201 children, using 196 wells, had been assessed. Procedure. Children and their mothers came to our field clinic, where children participated in the assessments described below and received a medical examination by a study physician. Weight, height, and head circumference were measured. Children provided urine specimens for the measurement of urinary As and creatinine and were asked to provide a blood sample for the measurement of blood lead (BPb) and hemoglobin (Hgb) concentrations. Of the 201 children assessed, 107 agreed to provide blood samples. Information on family demographics (e.g., parental education, occupation, housing type) was available from the baseline interview of parents during their enrollment in the cohort study. Information on the primary source of drinking water was obtained from the child's mother. Parents were asked whether their home included a television; about parental age, education, and occupation; and about child birth order. For an additional surrogate for social class, the type of roofing on the well owner's home was recorded as thatched thatch n. 1. Plant stalks or foliage, such as reeds or palm fronds, used for roofing. 2. Something, such as a thick growth of hair on the head, that resembles thatch. 3. Dead turf, as on a lawn. tr.v. , tin, or cement (thatched lowest, cement highest). Children were given a toy as thanks for their participation; families participating in the larger cohort study receive primary medical care at our own field clinic. Measures. Water analyses. Water As concentrations of tube wells at each child's home were obtained during a survey of all wells in the study region (van Geen et al. 2003b) and shipped to Columbia University's Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory for analysis. Water samples were analyzed by graphite furnace atomic absorption Graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrometry (GFAAS) (also known as Electrothermal Atomic Absorption Spectrometry (ETAAS)) is a type of spectrometry that uses a graphite-coated furnace to vaporize the sample. (GFAA GFAA Graphite Furnace Atomic Absorption GFAA Game Fishing Association of Australia GFAA Gainesville Fine Art Association (Florida) ), which had a detection limit of 5 [micro]g/L. Those water samples found to have < 5 [micro]g/L were subsequently reanalyzed by inductively in·duc·tive adj. 1. Of, relating to, or using logical induction: inductive reasoning. 2. Electricity Of or arising from inductance: inductive reactance. coupled plasma-mass spectrometry spectrometry /spec·trom·e·try/ (spek-trom´e-tre) determination of the wavelengths or frequencies of the lines in a spectrum. spec·trom·e·try n. (ICP-MS ICP-MS Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectroscopy ), which has a detection limit of 0.1 [micro]g/L (Cheng et al. 2004). Of the 196 well-water samples, 194 were also analyzed for Mn by standard flame atomic absorption spectrophotometry spectrophotometry Branch of spectroscopy dealing with measurement of radiant energy transmitted or reflected by a body as a function of wavelength. The measurement is usually compared to that transmitted or reflected by a system that serves as a standard. . Biochemical measurements. Urinary As concentrations were assayed by GFAA at the Mailman School of Public Health, using a Perkin-Elmer Analyst 600 system as previously described (Nixon et al. 1991). Our laboratory participates in a quality control program coordinated by P. Weber at the Quebec Toxicology toxicology, study of poisons, or toxins, from the standpoint of detection, isolation, identification, and determination of their effects on the human body. Toxicology may be considered the branch of pharmacology devoted to the study of the poisonous effects of drugs. Center (Quebec City, Quebec, Canada). During the course of this study, intraclass correlation In statistics, the intraclass correlation (or the intraclass correlation coefficient[1]) is a measure of correlation, consistency or conformity for a data set when it has multiple groups. coefficients between our laboratory's values and samples calibrated cal·i·brate tr.v. cal·i·brat·ed, cal·i·brat·ing, cal·i·brates 1. To check, adjust, or determine by comparison with a standard (the graduations of a quantitative measuring instrument): at Weber's laboratory were 0.99. Levels of As in urine were also adjusted for urinary creatinine levels, which were analyzed by a colorimetric col·or·im·e·ter n. 1. Any of various instruments used to determine or specify colors, as by comparison with spectroscopic or visual standards. 2. Sigma Diagnostics Kit (Sigma, St. Louis, MO, USA). In addition, urinary As metabolites Metabolites Substances produced by metabolism or by a metabolic process. Mentioned in: Interactions were speciated using a method adapted after Heitkemper et al. (2001). This method employs high-performance liquid chromatography separation of arsenobetaine (AsB), arsenocholine (AsC), arsenate ar·se·nate n. A salt of arsenic acid. arsenate an uncommon garden pesticide, as lead arsenate, or as antifungal spray on fruit trees or cattle tick dip as sodium arsenate. , arsenite, monomethylarsonic acid (MMA (Microcomputer Managers Association, Inc.) A membership organization with chapters throughout the U.S. that was devoted to educating personnel responsible for personal computers. It disbanded in 1996. Mma - A fast Mathematica-like system, in Allegro CL by R. Fateman, 1991. ), and dimethylarsinic acid (DMA (1) (Digital Media Adapter) See digital media hub. (2) (Document Management Alliance) A specification that provides a common interface for accessing and searching document databases. ), followed by detection by ICP-MS. The percentages of inorganic As (InAs; i.e., arsenate + arsenite), MMA, and DMA were calculated after subtracting AsC and AsB from total urinary As. Venous blood venous blood n. Abbr. v Blood that has passed through the capillaries of various tissues other than the lungs, is found in the veins, in the right chambers of the heart, and in pulmonary arteries, and is usually dark red as a result of a samples were obtained for measurements of BPb (Fernandez and Hilligoss 1982) and Hgb. Whole-blood samples were appropriately stored and transported to a laboratory at Columbia University that participates in the BPb quality control program of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), agency of the U.S. Public Health Service since 1973, with headquarters in Atlanta; it was established in 1946 as the Communicable Disease Center. (CDC See Control Data, century date change and Back Orifice. CDC - Control Data Corporation ; Atlanta, GA, USA). Intraclass correlation coefficients between our laboratory's values and samples calibrated at CDC ranged between 0.97 and 0.99. Children providing blood samples had mothers with significantly more years of education and received significantly higher Verbal raw scores than did mothers of children not providing blood samples (Wilcoxon tests, degrees of freedom = 1, p-values < 0.05); there were no other differences between those providing and not providing blood samples. Children's intellectual function. The Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children, version III (WISC-III WISC-III Wechsler Intelligence Scales for Children, 3rd Edition ; Wechsler 1991), suitable for children [greater than or equal to] 6 years of age, consists of five (or six, depending upon administration) verbal subtests, which together provide a Verbal intellectual quotient quotient - The number obtained by dividing one number (the "numerator") by another (the "denominator"). If both numbers are rational then the result will also be rational. (IQ) score, and a similar number of performance subtests that together provide a Performance IQ. Neither the WISC-III (Wechsler 1991) nor any other recently well-standardized child IQ test has been adapted or standardized for use in Bangladesh. In Araihazar, living conditions living conditions npl → condiciones fpl de vida living conditions npl → conditions fpl de vie living conditions living differ dramatically from those in Western settings where this test was developed, which necessitated adaptations for use in this culture. For example, a typical home consists of a single room, often with a dirt floor. Most families use biomass fuel (leaves, hay, dung DUNG. Manure. Sometimes it is real estate, and at other times personal property. When collected in a heap, it is personal estate; when spread out on the land, it becomes incorporated in it, and it is then real estate. Vide Manure. ) for cooking. Electricity is available in most homes; commonly this consists of one or two bulbs used for lighting. Many common Western household items, such as telephones and bathtubs, are rare. We used six subtests that seemed the most culturally adaptable to this cultural context. Of the WISC-III Verbal subtests, we used Similarities and Digit Span: Of the Performance subtests, we used Picture Completion, Coding, Block Design, and Mazes. Two items with no recognizable analog were eliminated from the Picture Completion subscale (telephone, bathtub), and close substitutions were made for four others from the Similarities subscale ("mango mango (măng`gō), evergreen tree of the Anacardiaceae (sumac family), native to tropical E Asia and now grown in both hemispheres. The chief species, Mangifera indica, is believed to have been cultivated for about 6,000 years. and banana" for "apple and banana"; "flute and drum" for "piano and guitar"; "dog and cow" for "cat and mouse"; and "tire and ball" for "wheel and ball"). The WISC-III subtests include items of graduated difficulty, with more points awarded for harder items or faster completion. We summed these weighted items across Verbal, Performance, and Full-Scale domains to create Verbal, Performance, and Full-Scale raw scores; we also transformed these into measures of estimated Verbal, Performance, and Full-Scale IQ, using procedures presented in the test manual (Wechsler 1991), despite the obvious limitations in application to this population. Below we use "IQ" to represent this estimated measure. Maternal intelligence was assessed with Raven's Standard Progressive Matrices, a nonverbal non·ver·bal adj. 1. Being other than verbal; not involving words: nonverbal communication. 2. Involving little use of language: a nonverbal intelligence test. test relatively free of cultural influences (Raven et al. 1983). Translation and training. All tests and interviews were translated (and back-translated) between Bangla (Bengali) and English. As noted, items deemed to be culturally inappropriate were altered or omitted. Materials were piloted to ensure maternal and child comprehension; two interviewers were then trained by a competent tester (G.A.W.) and then continued with supervised practice sessions for 2 weeks. All written test responses were rechecked when data were sent to the Columbia University Department of Psychiatry for entry. Statistical analyses. Outcomes. Because of concerns about the application of U.S. standardization of the WISC-III to Bangladeshi children, we first conducted analyses that predicted Verbal, Performance, and Full-Scale raw scores. Because the psychometric psy·cho·met·rics n. (used with a sing. verb) The branch of psychology that deals with the design, administration, and interpretation of quantitative tests for the measurement of psychological variables such as intelligence, aptitude, and properties of IQ scores are more familiar to readers, we also applied the same analytic models to the prediction of estimated Verbal "IQ," Performance "IQ," and Full-Scale "IQ." Covariate adjustment. In Bangladesh, grammar school extends to fifth grade. Therefore, mother's and father's education were categorized as none, 1-5 years, and 6-13 years. Parental occupation was recoded as laborer/ farmer, factory/other paid job, business, or missing/other. Because just 6% (n = 11) of mothers reported working outside the home, only paternal occupation was included in the regression models. From a pool of potential demographic covariates, we retained those that were empirically or theoretically importantly related to child intelligence, as well as those that made an initial contribution (at significance p [less than or equal to] 0.20 or better), in initial regression analyses, either to any of the outcomes of interest or to the measures of AS exposure. Analytic model. The analyses first sought to predict the outcomes of interest from the set of sociodemographic factors using linear regression Linear regression A statistical technique for fitting a straight line to a set of data points. models; once this "core" model was derived, we examined the incremental Additional or increased growth, bulk, quantity, number, or value; enlarged. Incremental cost is additional or increased cost of an item or service apart from its actual cost. association of exposures (Mn, As) singly and together, measured continuously. We repeated our analyses, categorizing children into groups, based on quartiles of water As to illustrate dose-response relationships. We next repeated these analyses for the subset of children providing blood samples for the measurement of BPb and Hgb, measured continuously. In all analyses, BPb and water As were log-transformed and water Mn was square root-transformed to make distributions approximately symmetric. For the most part, analyses are based on n = 201 children. Analyses considering well-water Mn employ n = 194. Analyses involving urinary As and its metabolites are based on n = 200; for analyses considering BPb and Hgb, n = 107. Results Sample characteristics. Table 1 presents descriptive information for all demographic, water, and biochemical variables. Average child age was 10 years; approximately half the children in the sample were male; one-third had regular access to a television. On average, mothers and fathers reported 3.7 and 2.9 years of education, respectively. Average child height was 125.6 cm, and average weight was 21.9 kg, values that correspond to roughly the fourth percentile percentile, n the number in a frequency distribution below which a certain percentage of fees will fall. E.g., the ninetieth percentile is the number that divides the distribution of fees into the lower 90% and the upper 10%, or that fee level by U.S. norms (CDC 2003). Exposure characteristics. Water As concentrations ranged from 0.094 to 790 [micro]g/L, with a mean (117.8 [micro]g/dL) and distribution comparable to those in the larger set of 6,000 contiguous wells in Araihazar (van Geen et al. 2003b). The mean water Mn concentration of 1,386 [micro]g/L was well in excess of the U.S. and WHO recommended maximum contaminant level Maximum Contaminant Levels are standards that are set by the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) for drinking water quality. A Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL) is the legal threshold limit on the amount of a hazardous substance that is allowed in drinking water under (MCL MCL - Macintosh Common LISP ) of 500 [micro]g/L, with a range up to 5,438; water Mn values are not available for the entire set of 6,000 wells. Indeed, 82% of children were consuming water in excess of the MCL for Mn. The association between water As and water Mn was significant (Spearman spear·man n. A man, especially a soldier, armed with a spear. r = 0.39; p < 0.0001) but not strong enough to preclude examination of their independent effects on child intelligence. The correlation between water As and urinary As (Spearman r = 0.45, p < 0.0001) was comparable to that previously reported for adults in this region (Ahsan et al. 2000). In the subsample sub·sam·ple n. A sample drawn from a larger sample. tr.v. sub·sam·pled, sub·sam·pling, sub·sam·ples To take a subsample from (a larger sample). of children for whom BPb measures were obtained (n = 107), Spearman correlations (necessitated by skewed distributions) with well-water As (-0.16) and with urinary As (-0.06) were not significant. Relationship between covariates and intellectual function. Linear regression analyses predicting test raw scores from the socio-demographic features retained in the final "core" model revealed generally better scores in children of more educated mothers and of mothers with higher Raven scores, those living in more adequate dwellings, those with access to television, and those who were taller and had larger head circumference (data not shown). Relationship between well-water Mn and intellectual function. Without adjustment for either core variables or water As, water Mn was significantly associated with Full-Scale and Performance raw scores (B-values = -0.33 and -0.29, p < 0.002 and p < 0.001, respectively) but not with Verbal raw score (B = -0.04, p = 0.15). Addition of Mn to analytic models made little change in associations between core model variables and intellectual function raw scores. Controlling for sociodemographic features, Mn levels were significantly negatively associated with Performance and Full-Scale raw scores (B-values = -0.20 and -0.22, respectively, p < 0.03) but not with Verbal raw score (B = -0.02, p > 0.5). However, when water As was added to these models, Mn made no significant (p > 0.25) contribution to intellectual function. With both water As and water Mn in the model, there was no significant interaction in their prediction of Full-Scale, Verbal, or Performance raw scores. Relationship between well-water As and intellectual function. Table 2 presents associations between water As and intellectual function, before and after adjustment for sociodemographic features. In each case, associations between water AS and intellectual function raw scores were stronger before adjustment for sociodemographic features. In unadjusted analyses, water As explained 7.29, 2.61, and 7.04% of the variance in Performance, Verbal, and Full-Scale raw scores, respectively. With covariate adjustment, water AS remained significantly negatively associated with both performance and Full-Scale raw scores, explaining an incremental 4.33, 0.89, and 3.88% of the variance in Performance, Verbal, and Full-Scale raw scores, respectively. Results were similar when "IQ" outcomes were substituted for raw scores (data not shown). Dose-response relationships between water As and intellectual function. Figure 1 illustrates the adjusted Full-Scale, Performance, and Verbal raw scores by As quartile Quartile A statistical term describing a division of observations into four defined intervals based upon the values of the data and how they compare to the entire set of observations. Notes: Each quartile contains 25% of the total observations. . As water As increased, there were dose-dependent changes in adjusted and unadjusted (data not shown) scores. With adjustment, compared with the lowest quartile of As exposure, the third and fourth quartiles had significantly lower scores on both Full-Scale (B = -7.8 and -11.3, p < 0.05 and p < 0.01, respectively) and Performance raw scores (B = -7.3 and -9.7, p < 0.05 and p < 0.01, respectively). The highest exposure quartile was marginally lower on Verbal raw score than the lowest exposure quartile (B = -1.6, p < 0.10). The relationship between water As (measured continuously) and Full-Scale raw score is illustrated in Figure 2. Water As concentrations of 10 and 50 [micro]g/L were associated with decrements in Full-Scale raw scores of 3.8 and 6.4 points, respectively. [FIGURES 1-2 OMITTED] Relationship between urinary As, As metabolites, and intellectual function. We examined relationships between total urinary As concentration, as micrograms per gram creatinine, and child intellectual function. After adjustment for core variables, the associations between urinary As and measures of intellectual function were not statistically significant for Full-Scale (B = -2.9, p = 0.09), Performance (B = -2.2, p = 0.14), or Verbal scores (B = -0.7, p = 0.11) but were in the anticipated direction. Urine samples were analyzed by high-performance liquid chromatography/ICP-MS for the relative amounts of InAs, MMA, and DMA. The percentages of InAs, MMA, and DMA were calculated after subtracting the contribution of AsC and AsB to total As concentration. The mean [+ or -] SD AsC and AsB concentrations were 3.9 [+ or -] 3.5 [micro]g/g creatinine and 5.0 [+ or -] 7.5 [micro]g/g creatinine, respectively. The frequency distributions of InAs, MMA, and DMA are illustrated in Figure 3. There was a wide variability in the extent to which children eliminated As in the dimethylated form. On average, the percentages of urinary As eliminated as InAs, MMA, and DMA were 12.2, 8.9, and 74.1%, respectively. We posited that children who were poor methylators might be particularly adversely affected by As. However, when both DMA and urinary As were included in the core model, DMA failed to make a significant contribution to intellectual function and did not alter the estimates for total urinary As. [FIGURE 3 OMITTED] Relationships between BPb, Hgb, and intellectual function. Analyses predicting intellectual raw scores from other hematologic hematological, hematologic pertaining to or emanating from blood cells. hematological tests total and differential white cell counts, hematocrit estimation, erythrocyte count. measures, adjusted for the same demographic features, were conducted for the subset of 107 children providing blood samples. No significant associations were detected for log BPb or for Hgb on Verbal, Performance, or Full-Scale raw scores or "IQ," with or without the inclusion of water As (data not shown). Discussion This is the first systematic study of effects of As on children's intellectual function. Exposure to As from drinking water was associated with reduced scores on measures of intellectual function, before and after adjusting for sociodemographic features known to contribute to intellectual function. With covariate adjustment, water As remained significantly negatively associated with both Performance and Full-Scale raw scores. Exposure to As was associated with reduced intellectual function, in a dose-response manner, such that children with exposures > 50 [micro]g/L received significantly lower Performance and Full-Scale scores than did children with exposures < 5.5 [micro]g/L. The association was stronger for well-water As than for urinary As. Children in the highest quartile of water As scored approximately 10 points lower in Performance raw scores than did those in the lowest quartile. We have made diligent efforts to reduce the consumption of As-contaminated water in the Araihazar population since our original well survey was conducted in the first half of 2000. For example, each well was labeled to indicate As concentrations > and < 50 [micro]g/L, with either a skull and cross-bones or a picture of a child drinking water. In addition, a village education program that encouraged well switching (van Geen et al. 2002) successfully reached roughly half of all residents. Beyond these, new low-As private and community wells have been installed in parts of the region during this time frame (van Geen et al. 2003a). It is therefore likely that some recent reduction in these children's As exposure occurred between January 2001 (when well labeling began) and the summer of 2002 (when children were assessed). Indeed, in our simultaneous prospective cohort study in adults, repeated measurements of urine As concentrations over the same interval have declined. Because urinary As reflects recent exposure, reduced exposure may explain the weaker associations between intellectual function and levels of As in urine, compared with levels in water. Two published studies of As exposure also found adverse associations with children's intellectual function. In a small (n = 80) sample of children from a Pb smelter area in Mexico, Calderon et al. (2001) found negative associations between children's urinary As and Verbal intelligence Noun 1. verbal intelligence - intelligence in the use and comprehension of language intelligence - the ability to comprehend; to understand and profit from experience , controlling for a small set of demographic factors. Although investigating anthropogenic an·thro·po·gen·ic adj. 1. Of or relating to anthropogenesis. 2. Caused by humans: anthropogenic degradation of the environment. exposure to As and Pb, that study did not consider other potential toxicants to which nearby residents were exposed. In a second ecologic study, Tsai et al. (2003) compared adolescents in Taiwan from regions with and without elevated As in well water, with no measure of individual exposure. With minimal control for sociodemographic factors, adolescents in the exposed group showed inconsistently poorer scores on Performance-type tests; some outcomes were adversely affected in adolescents with low exposure (but not in those with high exposure) relative to those without exposure. As metabolism. Humans excrete excrete /ex·crete/ (eks-kret´) to throw off or eliminate by a normal discharge, such as waste matter. ex·crete v. To eliminate waste material from the body. MMA and DMA after ingestion ingestion /in·ges·tion/ (-chun) the taking of food, drugs, etc., into the body by mouth. in·ges·tion n. 1. The act of taking food and drink into the body by the mouth. 2. of arsenate or arsenite, but the extent of metabolism is remarkably variable and may influence both pre- 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. toxicity (Hopenhayn-Rich et al. 1996). This variability in methylation methylation, n a phase-II detoxification pathway in the liver; methyl groups combine with toxins to rid the body of various substances. methylation (meth´ is likely due to both genetic (Chung et al. 2002; Vahter et al. 1995) and dietary factors. Maintenance of an adequate supply of the ultimate methyl donor (i.e., S-adenosylmethionine) requires an adequate supply of dietary folate folate /fo·late/ (fo´lat) 1. the anionic form of folic acid. 2. more generally, any of a group of substances containing a form of pteroic acid conjugated with l-glutamic acid and having a variety of substitutions. and B vitamins B vitamins This family of vitamins consists of thiamine (B1), riboflavin (B2), niacin (B3), pantothenic acid (B5), pyridoxine (B6), biotin, folic acid (B9), and cobalamin (B12). . Two previous studies of As metabolism in very small groups of children have suggested that children are poor methylators compared with adults (Chowdhury et al. 2003; Concha concha /con·cha/ (kong´kah) pl. con´chae [L.] a shell-shaped structure. concha of auricle et al. 1998). For example, children in two exposed villages in Argentina eliminated 49 and 42%, respectively, as InAs in urine, significantly more than did women in the same villages (25 and 29%, respectively) (Concha et al. 1998). In our study, children were not poor metabolizers. Only 12.2% of urinary As was in the InAs form; mean levels of MMA and DMA were 8.8 and 74.1%, respectively. These metabolite metabolite, organic compound that is a starting material in, an intermediate in, or an end product of metabolism. Starting materials are substances, usually small and of simple structure, absorbed by the organism as food. levels compare favorably with those reported for adults (Concha et al. 1998; Hopenhayn-Rich et al. 1996) in various parts of the world and with those of a subset of 300 adults in our cohort study (data not shown). Mn and Pb exposure. The relationship between water Mn and children's intellectual function suggested a possible adverse effect, above and beyond the contribution of social factors. However, that relationship did not persist once water As was added to the regression model. This study was not designed to examine the effects of Mn exposure on intellectual function, and in fact there was a moderate and significant positive association between water Mn and water As. A rigorous examination of the possible relationship between Mn exposure and intellectual function in children calls for a study design in which As exposure is extremely low. We did not observe the anticipated relationship between BPb and child intellectual function. Our ability to detect this relationship was severely hampered by low statistical power, because approximately half of the study children refused to provide a blood sample. Limitations. We cannot comfortably make a statement about IQ points lost in relationship to As exposure, because of limitations in the application of the U.S. standardization norms to the generation of IQ scores in the present study population. As we have pointed out, the lack of measures of intelligence standardized for use in Bangladesh hampers our ability to draw inferences about IQ points lost at given levels of exposure. Although we have followed sound procedures (derived from our related work in Kosovo) for adapting a widely used instrument to this very different cultural setting, and although we have avoided, for the most part, drawing conclusions about IQ, the measures used here are not measures of IQ, and the absence of standardized measures remains a limitation. Employing raw scores avoids many pitfalls that would result from using nonstandardized procedures; however, the removal of culturally bound items and subscales diverges from common practice. On the other hand, other simpler predictors of child intellectual function, such as maternal education and child height and head circumference, were significantly related to intellectual raw scores in the expected directions. This gives us confidence in the validity of the observed associations with As. To provide estimates of the impact of As exposure on IQ that would be more directly useful to policy makers, future research should either standardize an IQ test for Bangladesh (a considerable undertaking) or replicate the present effort in a well-defined sample of Western children. Given that the prevalence of malnutrition is quite high in Bangladesh, and that children in our study were of small stature relative to U.S. norms (although not anemic anemic pertaining to anemia. ), the dose--response relationship in U.S. children may be different. The present investigation examines a single age group at a single point in time. We do not know whether the present level of deficit can be detected earlier, whether continued exposure is associated with increased intellectual loss, or, conversely, whether a reduction in exposure would be associated with improved functioning. Better understanding of the exposure--outcome relationship could be obtained by following a group of children from an earlier age and tracking both exposure and outcome regularly. We believe that our finding of a strong association between As exposure and intelligence is both important and tragic and adds urgency to the need for effective remediation in Bangladesh and other regions of South Asia This article is about the geopolitical region in Asia. For geophysical treatments, see Indian subcontinent. South Asia, also known as Southern Asia where consumption of As-contaminated water is prevalent. 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al. 2002. Promotion of well-switching to mitigate the current arsenic
crisis in Bangladesh. Bull WHO 80:732-737.van Geen A, Zheng Y, Versteeg R, Stute M, Horneman A, Dhar R, et al. 2003b. Spatial variability Spatial variability is characterized by different values for an observed attribute or property that are measured at different geographic locations in an area. The geographic locations are recorded using GPS (global positioning systems) while the attribute's spatial variability is of arsenic in 6000 tube wells in a 25 [km.sup.2] area of Bangladesh. Water Resources Res 35:1140-1150. Wechsler D. 1991. Manual for the WISC-III. San Antonio San Antonio (săn ăntō`nēō, əntōn`), city (1990 pop. 935,933), seat of Bexar co., S central Tex., at the source of the San Antonio River; inc. 1837. , TX: Psychological Corporation. Gail A. Wasserman, (1,2) Xinhua Liu, (2,3) Faruque Parvez, (3) Habibul Ahsan, (3) Pam Factor-Litvak, (3) Alexander van Geen, (4) Vesna Slavkovich, (3) Nancy J. Lolacono, (3) Zhongqi Cheng, (4) Iftikhar Hussain, (5) Hassina Momotaj, (6) and Joseph H. Graziano (3) (1) Department of Psychiatry, College of Physicians and Surgeons College of Physicians and Surgeons: see Columbia Univ. , Columbia University, New York, New York, USA; (2) New York State Psychiatric Institute The New York State Psychiatric Institute, established in 1895, was one of the first institutions in the United States to integrate teaching, research and therapeutic approaches to the care of patients with mental illnesses. , New York, New York, USA; (3) Mailman School of Public Health and (4) Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory (LDEO) is a world-class research institution specializing in the Earth sciences and is part of Columbia University. The current director of Lamont is G. Michael Purdy. , Columbia University, New York, New York, USA; (5) National Institute of Preventive and Social Medicine, Dhaka, Bangladesh; (6) Columbia University Bangladesh Arsenic Project, New York, New York, USA Address correspondence to G.A. Wasserman, New York State Psychiatric Institute, 1051 Riverside Dr., Unit 78, New York, NY 10032 USA. Telephone (212) 543-5296. Fax (212) 543-1000. E-mail: wassermg@childpsych.columbia.edu We thank J. Kline for her epidemiologic contributions. We also acknowledge our Bangladeshi field staff and the people of Araihazar. This work was supported by 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. grants P42 ES 10349, P30 ES 09089, the Mailman School of Public Health, and the Earth Institute at Columbia University. The authors declare they have no competing financial interests. Received 14 January 2004; accepted 28 April 2004.
Table 1. Sample characteristics [no. (%) or mean [+ or -]
SDI.
Variable No. (%)
Male 98 (48.8)
Television access 70 (34.8)
House type
Thatched roof or poorer 20 (10.0)
Corrugated tin 149 (74.1)
Concrete construction 32 (15.2)
Father's occupation
Other/missing 23 (11.4)
Laborer/farmer 47 (23.4)
Factory/other paid job 67 (33.3)
Business 64 (31.8)
Child age 10.0 [+ or -] 0.4 (a)
Full-Scale "IQ" 53.0 [+ or -] 6.3
Verbal "IQ" 55.4 [+ or -] 5.2
Performance "IQ" 58.4 [+ or -] 8.0
Full-Scale raw score 70.5 [+ or -] 20.8
Verbal raw score 16.5 [+ or -] 5.1
Performance raw score 54.0 [+ or -] 17.4
Height (cm) 125.6 [+ or -] 6.5
Weight (kg) 21.9 [+ or -] 3.3
Body mass index (kg/[m.sup.2]) 13.8 [+ or -] 1.1
Head circumference (cm) 49.5 [+ or -] 1.4
Mother's education (years) 2.9 [+ or -] 3.4
Father's education (years) 3.7 [+ or -] 3.7
Mother's age (years) 32.6 [+ or -] 6.7
Mother's Raven's score 14.4 [+ or -] 3.5
Water Mn ([micro]g/L) 1,386 [+ or -] 927
Water As ([micro]g/L) 117.8 [+ or -] 145.2
Urinary As ([micro]g/L) 116.6 [+ or -] 148.8
Urinary creatinine (mg/dL) 43.3 [+ or -] 34.1
Urinary As ([micro]g/g creatinine) 296.6 [+ or -] 277.2
Hgb (g/dL) 12.6 [+ or -] 1.1
BPb ([micro]g/dL) 10.1 [+ or -] 3.3
Except where noted, sample size is 201. Values are no. (%)
except where indicated.
(a) Mean [+ or -] SD.
Table 2. Prediction of Verbal, Performance, and
Full-Scale raw scores from water As before and
after covariate adjustment.
Variable Performance Verbal Full-Scale
Before adjustment
Water As -1.84 (#) -0.32 * -2.16 *
After adjustment
Maternal education
None -6.25 (##) -2.57 * -8.82 *
1-5 years -2.75 -0.98 -3.74
5-13 years (Reference group)
Maternal 0.46 -0.02 0.44
intelligence
House type
Thatched roof -7.03 -1.93 -8.96 **
or poorer
Corrugated tin -1.50 -0.34 -1.83
Concrete (Reference group)
Television access 3.53 1.60 * 5.13 **
Height 0.69 (#) 0.13 * 0.81 *
Head circumference 2.31 ** 0.78 ** 3.08 **
Water As -1.45 ** -0.19 -1.64 **
Total [R.sup.2] (%) 29.02 22.83 31.63
* p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, (#) p < 0.001, (##) p < 0.10.
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