Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10115859 | Environmental Research | 2018 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
These findings suggest that maternal exposure to OH-PCBs during pregnancy may increase both maternal and neonatal FT4 levels. Neonatal FT4 is presumed to be increased by prenatal 4-OH-CB187 indirectly, and this process may be mediated by maternal THs and neonatal TSH.
Keywords
TSHtransthyretinOH-PCBsFT4TTRATGAGFIIQRAmCGFICFIPCBsLC/MS/MSTHsAntithyroglobulin antibodyPolychlorinated biphenyladjusted goodness of fit indexthyroxineFree thyroxinegoodness of fit indexHydroxylated polychlorinated biphenylsComparative Fit IndexLiquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometryconfidence intervalPrenatal exposureLodinterquartile rangelimit of detectionStructural equation modelingProspective cohort studyThyroid hormonethyroid stimulating hormoneThyroid hormoneshydroxylated polychlorinated biphenyl
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Authors
Sachiko Itoh, Toshiaki Baba, Motoyuki Yuasa, Chihiro Miyashita, Sumitaka Kobayashi, Atsuko Araki, Seiko Sasaki, Jumboku Kajiwara, Tsuguhide Hori, Takashi Todaka, Kaori Fujikura, Sonomi Nakajima, Shizue Kato, Reiko Kishi,