Abstract

Early-life exposure to environmental toxicants can have detrimental effects on children’s neurodevelopment. In the current study, we employed a causal modeling framework to examine the direct effect of specific maternal prenatal exposures on infants’ neurodevelopment in the context of co-occurring metals. Maternal metal exposure and select micronutrients’ concentrations were assessed using samples collected at the time of delivery from mothers living across Navajo Nation with community exposure to metal mixtures originating from abandoned uranium mines. Infants’ development across five domains was measured at ages 10 to 13 months using the Ages and Stages Questionnaire Inventory (ASQ:I), an early developmental screener. After adjusting for effects of other confounding metals and demographic variables, prenatal exposure to lead, arsenic, antimony, barium, copper, and molybdenum predicted deficits in at least one of the ASQ:I domain scores. Strontium, tungsten, and thallium were positively associated with several aspects of infants’ development. Mothers with lower socioeconomic status (SES) had higher lead, cesium, and thallium exposures compared to mothers from high SES backgrounds. These mothers also had infants with lower scores across various developmental domains. The current study has many strengths including its focus on neurodevelopmental outcomes during infancy, an understudied developmental period, and the use of a novel analytical method to control for the effects of co-occurring metals while examining the effect of each metal on neurodevelopmental outcomes. Yet, future examination of how the effects of prenatal exposure on neurodevelopmental outcomes unfold over time while considering all potential interactions among metals and micronutrients is warranted.

Highlights

  • The Navajo Nation, comprising lands in Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah, was heavily mined for uranium in order to supply World War II and Cold War nuclear weapons’research and programs [1,2]

  • We examined samples from the Navajo Birth Cohort Study (NBCS) for associations between in utero maternal exposure and infants’ neurodevelopmental outcomes in mother–infant pairs from mined and unmined regions that encompass a broad range of exposures

  • The median and geometric mean levels of cadmium, manganese, uranium, cobalt, barium, copper, antimony, strontium, tin, and tungsten were higher in Navajo pregnant mothers compared to mothers in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) sample

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Summary

Introduction

The Navajo Nation, comprising lands in Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah, was heavily mined for uranium in order to supply World War II and Cold War nuclear weapons’research and programs [1,2].

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