Concentrations of Lead and Arsenic in Mother’s Milk and Children’s Blood in Peruvian Breastfeeding Dyads

Author:

Linares Ana Maria1ORCID,Thaxton-Wiggins Amanda1,Unrine Jason M.2

Affiliation:

1. College of Nursing, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, USA

2. Environmental Toxicology, Department of Plant and Soil Sciences. Agriculture Science Center North, Kentucky Water Resources Research Institute, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, USA

Abstract

Background: Toxic trace elements could enter human milk through mothers’ food consumption, drinking water, air, or incidental soil ingestion, and are of concern to the nursing infant. Research Aim: To determine the concentration of toxic trace elements (lead and arsenic) in Peruvian mothers’ milk and their association with blood concentrations in their own infants 3–20 months old. Method: This exploratory, cross-sectional study, carried out in Peru, included breastfeeding mother/child dyads ( N = 40). Following standardized protocols, biospecimens of human milk and child’s blood were collected. Results: Lead and arsenic concentrations in milk were above the method detection limits in 73% and 100% of samples with median concentrations of 0.26 µg/L ( IQR = 0.10, 0.33 µg/L) and 0.73 µg/L ( IQR = 0.63, 0.91 µg/L), respectively. Concentrations of lead and arsenic in blood were 2.05 µg/dL ( SD = 1.35), and 1.43 µg/dl (geometric mean: SD = 1.39), respectively. Blood lead concentrations in 12.5% ( n = 5) of the samples were above the U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention reference value (< 3.5 µg/dl), and over half of arsenic concentrations were above the acceptable levels of < 1.3 µg/dl (Mayo Clinic Interpretative Handbook). Our results showed that for every one-month increase in age, lead blood concentrations increased by 0.1 µg/dl ( p = 0.023). Additionally, every 1 µg/L increase in the mother’s milk arsenic was associated with a 1.40 µg/dl increase in the child’s blood arsenic concentration. Conclusions: Implementing effective interventions to decrease the toxic exposure of reproductive-aged women is needed in Peru and worldwide.

Funder

Fulbright Foundation

university of kentucky

UK-CARES

National Institute of Health

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Obstetrics and Gynecology

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