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Luchtvervuiling geeft hogere kans op gedragsproblemen*
Uit een studie onder 215 kinderen blijkt dat luchtvervuiling tijdens de zwangerschap kan zorgen voor nakomelingen met gedragsproblemen. Bij de geboorte werd het navelstrengbloed onderzocht op de aanwezigheid van markers, waaronder de marker voor polyclyclische aromaten (PAK). PAK ontstaan bij onvolledige verbranding van o.m. fossiele brandstoffen, voedingsmiddelen en hout. De kinderen van de moeders met de hoogste waarden van deze markers bleken op vijf- en zevenjarige leeftijd duidelijk meer gedragsproblemen te hebben, dan de moeders met lagere waarden.
Prenatal Exposure to Certain Pollutants Linked to Behavioral Problems in Young Children
Mothers' exposure during pregnancy to pollutants created by the incomplete combustion of fossil fuels and other organic material may lead to behavioral problems in their children, according to a new study. Researchers found that within a sample of 215 children monitored from birth, those children with high levels of a pollution exposure marker in their cord blood had more symptoms of attention problems and anxiety/depression at ages 5 and 7 than did children with lower exposure.
The study is published in Environmental Health Perspectives.
The researchers measured a biologic marker or "fingerprint" of exposure to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) and other combustion-related pollutants in newborns' cord blood. When inhaled by the mother during pregnancy, these pollutants can be transferred across the placenta and bind to the DNA of the fetus, forming "adducts" in blood and other tissues and providing a biologic measure of pollutant exposure. Mothers completed a detailed assessment of their child's behavior.
In urban air, traffic emissions are a dominant source of the pollutants measured in the study. The authors accounted for other sources such as environmental tobacco smoke and diet in their analyses. None of the mothers in the study were smokers.
The study by researchers at the Columbia Center for Children's Environmental Health (CCCEH) and the Institute of Cancer Research in England is the first to examine the behavioral effects of prenatal exposure to these air pollutants in children using a biologic marker.
"The results are of potential concern since attention problems and anxiety and depression may affect subsequent academic performance as well as peer relationships and other aspects of societal functioning," said Dr. Frederica Perera, the study's lead author and Center Director. "Fortunately, it is possible to reduce these air pollutants through currently available pollution controls, energy efficiency, and alternative energy sources."
Funding for the study was provided by NIEHS, the EPA and private foundations.
(Juli 2011) 

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