Change in metabolic and cognitive state among people of the Aral zone of ecological disaster

Author:

Namazbaeva Zulkiya1,Battakova Sharbanu1,Ibrayeva Lyazat12,Sabirov Zhanbol1

Affiliation:

1. a Republican State Governmental Enterprise with the right of commercial activity “National Centre of Labour Hygiene and Occupational Diseases”, Ministry of Healthcare of the Republic of Kazakhstan, Karaganda, Kazakhstan

2. b Republican State Governmental Enterprise with the right of commercial activity, Karaganda State Medical University, Ministry of Healthcare of the Republic of Kazakhstan, Karaganda, Kazakhstan

Abstract

Risk factors in Aral Sea region include toxic metals that competitively interact with essential elements influencing their metabolism, affecting metabolic and cognitive functions. According to epidemiological data, cerebrovascular disease and thyroid function abnormality are the leading disorders. Cognitive and metabolic disorders are considered as risk factors in cerebrovascular diseases. Thus, the objective of current work was to determine the metabolic and cognitive state of people in Aralsk, associated with an imbalance of essential trace elements and find correlation between toxic metals load and psychoemotional status. 275 people between the ages of 21 and 45 years were involved. In evaluating cognitive state, a decrease in short-term memory for numbers and an increase in depression among subjects was found. An inverse correlation between the copper level in blood and short-term memory for numbers, between depression and iodine level in blood, between the zinc level in blood and the “attentional capacity” was also found. The results showed a significant metabolic stress among subjects during adaptation to a high chemical load. Data represent a cross-sectional age-dependent review of metabolic and cognitive processes and microelement metabolism among population, living in the Aral Sea region for a long time.

Publisher

Brill

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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