Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2593400 Reproductive Toxicology 2015 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Mothers with preterm low birth weight infants had higher levels of lead in urine.•Prenatal exposure to lead was associated with preterm low birth weight.•Female infants appeared to be more susceptible to lead than male infants.

We investigated the association between prenatal exposure to lead (Pb) and the risk of preterm low birth weight (PLBW). Pb concentrations in maternal urine collected at birth from 408 subjects (102 cases and 306 matched controls) were analyzed and adjusted by creatinine. The median Pb concentration in the PLBW cases (10.60 μg Pb/g creatinine) was higher than that of the controls (7.28 μg Pb/g creatinine). An adjusted odds ratio (OR) of 2.96 (95% CI = 1.49–5.87) for PLBW was observed when the highest tertile was compared to the lowest tertile of Pb levels. The association was more pronounced among female infants (adjusted OR = 3.67 for the highest tertile; 95% CI = 1.35–9.93) than male infants (adjusted OR = 1.91 for the highest tertile; 95% CI = 0.74–4.95). Our study suggests that prenatal exposure to levels of Pb encountered today in China is associated with an elevated risk of PLBW.

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