(Press-News.org) A study led by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health has for the first time found that a mother's higher exposure to some common environmental contaminants was associated with more frequent and vigorous fetal motor activity. Some chemicals were also associated with fewer changes in fetal heart rate, which normally parallel fetal movements. The study of 50 pregnant women found detectable levels of organochlorines in all of the women participating in the study—including DDT, PCBs and other pesticides that have been banned from use for more than 30 years. The study is available online in advance of publication in the Journal of Exposure Science and Environmental Epidemiology.
"Both fetal motor activity and heart rate reveal how the fetus is maturing and give us a way to evaluate how exposures may be affecting the developing nervous system. Most studies of environmental contaminants and child development wait until children are much older to evaluate effects of things the mother may have been exposed to during pregnancy; here we have observed effects in utero," said Janet A. DiPietro, PhD, lead author of the study and Associate Dean for Research at the Bloomberg School of Public Health.
For the study, DiPietro and her colleagues followed a sample of 50 high- and low- income pregnant women living in and around Baltimore, Md. At 36 weeks of pregnancy, blood samples were collected from the mothers and measurements were taken of fetal heart rate and motor activity. The blood samples were tested for levels of 11 pesticides and 36 polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) compounds.
According to the findings, all participants had detectable concentrations of at least one-quarter of the analyzed chemicals, despite the fact that they have been banned for more than three decades. Fetal heart rate effects were not consistently observed across all of the compounds analyzed; when effects were seen, higher chemical exposures were associated with reductions in fetal heart rate accelerations, an indicator of fetal wellbeing. However, associations with fetal motor activity measures were more consistent and robust: higher concentrations of 7 of 10 organochlorine compounds were positively associated with one of more measures of more frequent and more vigorous fetal motor activity. These chemicals included hexachlorobenzene, DDT, and several PCB congeners. Women of higher socioeconomic status in the study had a greater concentration of chemicals compared to the women of lower socioeconomic status
"There is tremendous interest in how the prenatal period sets the stage for later child development. These results show that the developing fetus is susceptible to environmental exposures and that we can detect this by measuring fetal neurobehavior. This is yet more evidence for the need to protect the vulnerable developing brain from effects of environmental contaminants both before and after birth," said DiPietro.
###
"Fetal heart rate and motor activity associations with maternal organochlorine levels: results of an exploratory study" was written by Janet A. DiPietro, Meghan F. Davis, Kathleen A. Costigan, and Dana Boyd Barr.
The research was supported by the Eunice Kennedy Shiver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) 2R01 HD27592, and the National Institute for Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) Center grant ES03819.
Fetal neuromaturation associated with mother's exposure to ddt and other environmental contaminants
Study is the first to show association between mother's chemical exposure and fetal motor activity and heart rate
2013-06-11
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
How preferences of patients can be determined
2013-06-11
It is more important to patients suffering from depression that they show a noticeable response to treatment in the first place than being completely cured. It is exactly the opposite in physicians treating people with this disease: they consider remission to have higher priority than response. This is the result of a pilot project carried out by the German Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care (IQWiG) together with external experts.
Using the example of depression, IQWiG tested whether the Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP) method is in principle suitable ...
You're so vain: U-M study links social media and narcissism
2013-06-11
ANN ARBOR—Facebook is a mirror and Twitter is a megaphone, according to a new University of Michigan study exploring how social media reflect and amplify the culture's growing levels of narcissism.
The study, published online in Computers in Human Behavior, was conducted by U-M researchers Elliot Panek, Yioryos Nardis and Sara Konrath.
"Among young adult college students, we found that those who scored higher in certain types of narcissism posted more often on Twitter," said Panek, who recently received his doctorate in communication studies from U-M and will join ...
Females fend off gut diseases
2013-06-11
EAST LANSING, Mich. --- At least among mice, females have innate protection from certain digestive conditions, according to a new Michigan State University study.
While it's tricky to draw conclusions for human health, the findings could eventually help scientists better understand and treat the 1.4 million Americans suffering from inflammatory bowel diseases, or IBD.
Crohn's disease and colitis, the two most common forms of IBD, involve abnormal functioning of the immune system that can damage the digestive tract, causing inflammation, diarrhea, constipation, abdominal ...
Telephone counseling plus physician advice key to motivating breast cancer survivors to exercise
2013-06-11
PROVIDENCE, R.I. – Telephone-based counseling, when combined with physician advice, can help breast cancer survivors become more physically active, which can improve quality of life and lessen the side effects of cancer treatment, according to new research from The Miriam Hospital.
Researchers say women who received exercise advice from their surgeon or oncologist, followed by three months of telephone support, reported 30 more minutes of physical activity per week than patients who received exercise advice and follow-up calls about their general health.
The findings, ...
Discovery of the gene responsible for multiple intestinal atresia in newborns
2013-06-11
This news release is available in French. Physicians and researchers from Sherbrooke, Montreal and Quebec City have conducted a study that has led to the discovery of a gene that causes multiple intestinal atresia (MIA), a rare and life-threatening hereditary disorder that affects newborns. In addition to exploring novel therapeutic treatments for children with the disease, the discovery of the gene TTC7A will make it possible to develop a prenatal diagnostic test and a screening test for parents who are carriers. The Centre hospitalier universitaire de Sherbrooke (CHUS) ...
New research urges caution on use of peer support in chronic disease
2013-06-11
Health organisations need to give careful consideration to schemes which encourage people with chronic diseases to seek support from peers, to avoid the potential negative effects, new research shows.
The study was led by the University of Exeter Medical School will be published in the July edition of the journal Patient Education and Counseling, and is now available online. The research, supported by the National Institute for Health Research Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care in the South West Peninsula (PenCLAHRC), has highlighted both ...
Tillage and reduced-input rotations affect runoff from agricultural fields
2013-06-11
No-till management practices can reduce soil erosion, but evidence suggests they can also lead to increased runoff of dissolved phosphorus from soil surfaces. Meanwhile, farmers looking to avoid herbicides often have to combat weeds with tillage, which causes erosion. With all of the tradeoffs of different management systems, which one should growers use? To answer that question, researchers from the USDA Agricultural Research Service compared nutrient and sediment loss from no-till, conventional tillage, and reduced-input rotation watersheds in a study published online ...
NASA satellite sees Tropical Storm Yagi just south of Japan
2013-06-11
Tropical Storm Yagi is not expected to make landfall in Japan, but NASA satellite imagery showed that the storm was just south of the big island.
NASA's Aqua satellite passed over Tropical Storm Yagi on Tuesday, June 11 at 04:10 UTC (12:10 a.m. EDT/1:10 p.m. Japan local time) and the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer or MODIS instrument captured a visible image of the storm. The image showed that clouds associated with the northern fringes of the storm were draped over southeastern coastal Japan.
The MODIS image also revealed that Yagi has a long "tail" ...
Diabetes drug points the way to overcoming drug resistance in melanoma
2013-06-11
Advanced metastatic melanoma is a disease that has proven difficult to eradicate. Despite the success of melanoma-targeting drugs, tumors inevitably become drug resistant and return, more aggressive than before. In the current issue of the journal Cancer Cell, however, researchers at The Wistar Institute describe how they increase the effectiveness of anti-melanoma drugs by combining anticancer therapies with diabetes drugs.
Their studies, conducted in cell and animal models of melanoma, demonstrate that the combined therapy could destroy a subset of drug-resistant ...
Exercise for stroke patients' brains
2013-06-11
A new study finds that stroke patients' brains show strong cortical motor activity when observing others performing physical tasks – a finding that offers new insight into stroke rehabilitation.
Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), a team of researchers from USC monitored the brains of 24 individuals — 12 who had suffered strokes and 12 age-matched people who had not — as they watched others performing actions made using the arm and hand that would be difficult for a person who can no longer use their arm due to stroke – actions like lifting a pencil or ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Recycling the unrecyclable
Alien ocean could hide signs of life from spacecraft
Research unveils new strategies to tackle atrial fibrillation, a condition linked to stroke and dementia risks
Research spotlight: Researchers identify potential drug targets for future heart failure therapeutics
Air pollution clouds the mind and makes everyday tasks challenging
Uncovering how developmental genes are held in a poised state
Multimillion-pound research project aims to advance production of next-generation sustainable packaging
‘Marine Prosperity Areas’ represent a new hope inconservation
Warning signs may not be effective to deter cannabis use in pregnancy: Study
Efforts to find alien life could be boosted by simple test that gets microbes moving
Study shows some species are susceptible to broad range of viruses
How life's building blocks took shape on early Earth: the limits of membraneless polyester protocell formation
Survey: Many Americans don’t know long-term risks of heart disease with pregnancy
Dusting for stars’ magnetic fingerprints
Relief could be on the way for UTI sufferers dealing with debilitating pain
Testing AI with AI: Ensuring effective AI implementation in clinical practice
Researchers find improved method for treating rare, aggressive, pregnancy-related cancer
Half of the fish you eat comes from the Great Barrier Reef’s marine reserves
McDonald’s thwarts council efforts to stop new branches by claiming it promotes ‘healthier lifestyles’
Is CBD use during pregnancy as safe as people think? New study uncovers potential risks to babies
Drying and rewetting cycles substantially increased soil CO2 release
Hybrid job training improves participation for women in Nepal, study finds
Understanding aging requires more than counting birthdays
AI tool helps find life-saving medicine for rare disease
A new tool could exponentially expand our understanding of bacteria
Apply for the Davie Postdoctoral Fellowship in Artificial Intelligence for Astronomy
New study finds students' attitudes towards computer science impacts final grades
Clot-buster meds & mechanical retrieval equally reduce disability from some strokes
ISHLT relaunches Global IMACS Registry to advance MCS therapy and patient outcomes
Childhood trauma may increase the risk of endometriosis
[Press-News.org] Fetal neuromaturation associated with mother's exposure to ddt and other environmental contaminantsStudy is the first to show association between mother's chemical exposure and fetal motor activity and heart rate