Abstract

Communities of color or low socioeconomic status are disproportionately affected by metal exposure given spatial variability of the ambient levels of these contaminants. Despite this, there is little research characterizing metal concentrations in blood among disadvantaged populations in the U.S., especially among pregnant women who are particularly vulnerable and difficult to access. Thus, we conducted a pilot study among disadvantaged pregnant women in Houston, Texas to assess willingness to participate in key activities of an epidemiologic study and characterize exposures to 16 metals. Thirty-one women attending a Medicaid-serving prenatal clinic were included in this pilot study and completed an interviewer-administered questionnaire. We obtained and measured metal compounds in whole blood samples for 22 of these women during third-trimester prenatal visits. Median whole blood concentrations of Ni, As, Cd, and Pb were 27, 1.4, 0.6, and 6.3 µg/L, respectively. Most women were willing to participate in critical aspects of a research study, including wearing a personal air-sampling badge for 2–3 days (87.1%), receiving ultrasounds (83.9%), and providing blood draws (64.5%). Despite the small sample, our results provide evidence of women’s metal exposure and their willingness to participate in future research studies to elucidate exposure pathways and explore related health effects experienced among this population of disadvantaged pregnant women.

Highlights

  • Metals are ubiquitous in the environment due to biological and geological cycles, as well as anthropogenic activities, such as smelters or hazardous waste sites [1]

  • Women provided written informed consent, agreed to metal analysis of their routine third trimester blood draw, and completed an interviewer-administered questionnaire about residential history, smoking habits, and willingness to participate in future studies of pregnant women and their babies

  • We found evidence of exposure to Cd, Pb, Ni, and As among a small group of disadvantaged pregnant women in Houston, Texas

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Summary

Introduction

Metals are ubiquitous in the environment due to biological and geological cycles, as well as anthropogenic activities, such as smelters or hazardous waste sites [1]. Metals are chemically stable and persistent in the human body and the environment; the primary routes of human exposure to most metals is inhalation or ingestion [2]. Pregnant women and the developing fetus are susceptible to the effects of environmental contaminants, and many metals compounds can cross the placental barrier [3]. There is increasing evidence regarding adverse maternal and child. Res. Public Health 2017, 14, 474; doi:10.3390/ijerph14050474 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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