11 results on '"Jacobson, Joseph L."'
Search Results
2. Response inhibition and error monitoring during a visual go/no-go task in Inuit children exposed to lead, polychlorinated biphenyls, and methylmercury
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Boucher, Olivier, Burden, Matthew J., Muckle, Gina, Saint-Amour, Dave, Ayotte, Pierre, Dewailly, Eric, Nelson, Charles A., Jacobson, Sandra W., and Jacobson, Joseph L.
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Methylmercury -- Research -- Health aspects ,Polychlorinated biphenyls -- Research -- Health aspects ,Lead -- Health aspects -- Research ,Children -- Research -- Health aspects ,Environmental issues ,Health - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Lead (Pb) and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) are neurotoxic contaminants that have been related to impairment in response inhibition. OBJECTIVES: In this study we examined the neurophysiological correlates of the [...]
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- 2012
3. Thyroid hormone levels of pregnant inuit women and their infants exposed to environmental contaminants
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Dallaire, Renee, Muckle, Gina, Dewailly, Eric, Jacobson, Sandra W., Jacobson, Joseph L., Sandanger, Torkjel M., Sandau, Courtney D., and Ayotte, Pierre
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Polychlorinated biphenyls -- Health aspects ,Pregnant women -- Health aspects ,Prenatal drug exposure -- Health aspects ,Prenatal drug exposure -- Research ,Thyroid hormones -- Measurement ,Thyroid hormones -- Physiological aspects ,Thyroid hormones -- Research - Abstract
BACKGROUND: An increasing number of studies have shown that several ubiquitous environmental contaminants possess thyroid hormone--disrupting capacities. Prenatal exposure to some of them, such as polyehlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), has also [...]
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- 2009
4. Acute infections and environmental exposure to organochlorines in inuit infants from Nunavik
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Dallaire, Frederic, Dewailly, Eric, Muckle, Gina, Vezina, Carole, Jacobson, Sandra W., Jacobson, Joseph L., and Ayotte, Pierre
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Children - Abstract
The Inuit population of Nunavik (Canada) is exposed to immunotoxic organochlorines (OCs) mainly through the consumption of fish and marine mammal fat. We investigated the effect of perinatal exposure to [...]
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- 2004
5. Assessment of pre- and postnatal exposure to polychlorinated biphenyls: lessons from the inuit cohort study
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Ayotte, Pierre, Muckle, Gina, Jacobson, Joseph L., Jacobson, Sandra W., and Dewailly, Eric
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Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) are food-chain contaminants that have been shown to induce adverse developmental effects in humans. In the course of an epidemiologic study established to investigate neurodevelopmental deficits induced [...]
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- 2003
6. Relation of prenatal methylmercury exposure from environmental sources to childhood IQ
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Jacobson, Joseph L., Muckle, Gina, Ayotte, Pierre, Dewailly, Eric, and Jacobson, Sandra W.
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Intellect -- Environmental aspects ,Intelligence levels -- Environmental aspects ,Methylmercury -- Psychological aspects ,Child psychology -- Environmental aspects ,Prenatal influences -- Psychological aspects ,Environmental issues ,Health - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although prenatal methylmercury exposure has been linked to poorer intellectual function in several studies, data from two major prospective, longitudinal studies yielded contradictory results. Associations with cognitive deficits were reported in a Faroe Islands cohort, but few were found in a study in the Seychelles Islands. It has been suggested that co-exposure to another contaminant, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), may be responsible for the positive findings in the former study and that co-exposure to nutrients in methylmercury-contaminated fish may have obscured and/or protected against adverse effects in the latter. OBJECTIVES: We aimed to determine the degree to which co-exposure to PCBs may account for the adverse effects of methylmercury and the degree to which co-exposure to docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) may obscure these effects in a sample of Inuit children in Arctic Quebec. METHODS: IQ was estimated in 282 school-age children from whom umbilical cord blood samples had been obtained and analyzed for mercury and other environmental exposures. RESULTS: Prenatal mercury exposure was related to poorer estimated IQ after adjustment for potential confounding variables. The entry of DHA into the model significantly strengthened the association with mercury, supporting the hypothesis that beneficial effects from DHA intake can obscure adverse effects of mercury exposure. Children with cord mercury [greater than or equal to] 7.5 µg/L were four times as likely to have an IQ score < 80, the clinical cut-off for borderline intellectual disability. Co-exposure to PCBs did not alter the association of mercury with IQ. CONCLUSIONS: To our knowledge, this is the first study to document an association of prenatal mercury exposure with poorer performance on a school-age assessment of IQ, a measure whose relevance for occupational success in adulthood is well established. This association was seen at levels in the range within which many U.S. children of Asian-American background are exposed., Introduction The developmental neurotoxicity of methylmercury first became evident in the midtwentieth century when infants born to women who had eaten heavily contaminated fish in Minimata Bay, Japan (Harada 1995) [...]
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- 2015
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7. Domain-specific effects of prenatal exposure to PCBs, mercury, and lead on infant cognition: results from the environmental contaminants and child development study in Nunavik
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Boucher, Olivier, Muckle, Gina, Jacobson, Joseph L., Carter, R. Colin, Kaplan-Estrin, Melissa, Ayotte, Pierre, Dewailly, Eric, and Jacobson, Sandra W.
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Methylmercury -- Health aspects ,Fetus -- Growth ,Polychlorinated biphenyls -- Health aspects ,Cognition in infants -- Physiological aspects -- Environmental aspects ,Lead -- Health aspects ,Infants -- Development ,Pregnant women -- Health aspects ,Environmental issues ,Health - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), methylmercury (MeHg), and lead (Pb) are environmental contaminants known for their adverse effects on cognitive development. OBJECTIVES: In this study we examined the effects of prenatal exposure to PCBs, MeHg, and Pb on cognitive development in a sample of Inuit infants from Arctic Quebec. METHODS: Mothers were recruited at local prenatal clinics. PCBs, mercury (Hg), Pb, and two seafood nutrients--docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) and selenium (Se)--were measured in umbilical cord blood. Infants (n = 94) were assessed at 6.5 and 11 months of age on the Fagan Test of Infant Intelligence (FTII), A-not-B test, and Bayley Scales of Infant Development--2nd Edition (BSID-II). RESULTS: Multiple regression analyses revealed that higher prenatal PCB exposure was associated with decreased FTII novelty preference, indicating impaired visual recognition memory. Prenatal Hg was associated with poorer performance on A-not-B, which depends on working memory and is believed to be a precursor of executive function. Prenatal Pb was related to longer FTII fixation durations, indicating slower speed of information processing. CONCLUSIONS: PCBs, MeHg, and Pb each showed specific and distinct patterns of adverse associations with the outcomes measured during infancy. By contrast, none of these exposures was associated with performance on the BSID-II, a global developmental measure. The more focused, narrow band measures of cognitive function that appeared to be sensitive to these exposures also provide early indications of long-term impairment in specific domains that would otherwise not likely be evident until school age. 10.1289/ehp.1206323, Introduction Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), methyl-mercury (MeHg), and lead (Pb) are ubiquitous environmental contaminants, to which exposure in utero has been linked to adverse effects on cognitive function in childhood (Grandjean [...]
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- 2014
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8. Comparison of Polyuchlorinated Biphenyl Levels across Studies of Human Neurodevelopment.
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Longnecker, Matthew P., Wolff, Mary S., Gladen, Beth C., Brock, John W., Grandjean, Philippe, Jacobson, Joseph L., Korrick, Susan A., Rogan, Walter J., Wiesglas-Kuperus, Nynke, Hertz-Picciotto, Irva, Ayotte, Pierre, Stewart, Paul, Winneke, Gerhard, Charles, M. Judith, Jacobson, Sandra W., Dewailly, Eric, Boersma, E. Rudy, Altshul, Larisa M., and Heinzow, Birger
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POLYCHLORINATED biphenyls ,FOOD chains ,NEUROTOXIC agents - Abstract
Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) are persistent pollutants that are ubiquitous in the food chain, and detectable amounts are in the blood of almost every person in most populations that have been examined. Extensive evidence from animal studies shows that PCBs are neurotoxins, even at low doses. Interpretation of human data regarding low-level, early-life PCB exposure and subsequent neurodevelopment is problematic because levels of exposure were not similarly quantified across studies. We expressed the exposure levels from l0 studies of PCB and neurodevelopment in a uniform manner using a combination of data from original investigators, laboratory reanalyses, calculations based on published data, and expert opinion. The mainstay of our comparison was the median level of PCB 153 in maternal pregnancy serum. The median concentration of PCB 153 in the 10 studies ranged from 30 to 450 ng/g serum lipid, and the median of the 10 medians was 110 ng/g. We found that a) the distribution of PCB 153 exposure in most studies overlapped substantially, b) exposure levels in the Faroe Islands study were about 3-4-fold higher than in most other studies, and c) the exposure levels in the two recent U.S. studies were about one-third of those in the four earlier U.S. studies or recent Dutch, German, and northern Quebec studies. Our results will facilitate a direct comparison of the findings on PCBs and neurodevelopment when they are published for all 10 studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2003
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9. A Benchmark Dose Analysis of Prenatal exposure to Polychlorinated Biphenyls.
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Jacobson, Joseph L., Janisse, James, Banerjee, Mousumi, Jester, Jennifer, Jacobson, Sandra W., and Ager, Joel W.
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POLYCHLORINATED biphenyls , *PRENATAL diagnosis , *STATISTICS - Abstract
Benchmark dose (BMD) analysis is used to determine levels of exposure to environmental contaminants associated with increased public health risk. In this study we used a benchmark approach to evaluate the risks associated with prenatal exposure to polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs). We evaluated for intellectual impairment a cohort of children whose prenatal PCB exposure had been assessed from biologic specimens. We calculated BMDs and lower-bound confidence limits (BMDLs) for four end points using four sets of risk criteria. BMDLs were estimated using three different statistical methodologies. The BMDs and BMDLs were remarkably consistent across the four end points for each set of risk criteria, but differed substantially for the different risk criteria. The proportion of the sample considered at risk ranged from 9.8% for the least protective criteria to 74.1% for the most protective. Two methodologies, likelihood ratio and bootstrapping, generated generally similar BMDLs. BMD analysis provides a straightforward, reliable method for evaluating levels of exposure associated with increased public health risk. In the analyses performed in this study, the number of individuals considered at risk depended more on the risk criterion selected than on the outcome assessed. Key words: benchmark dose analysis, dose—response, environmental contaminants, in utero exposure, organochlorine contaminants, polychlorinated biphenyls, risk analysis. Environ Health Perspect 110:393–398 (2002). [Online 8 March 2002] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2002
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10. Prenatal Exposure of the Northern Québec Inuit Infants to Environmental Contaminants.
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Muckle, Gina, Ayotte, Pierre, Dewailly, Éric, Jacobson, Sandra W., and Jacobson, Joseph L.
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POLLUTANTS ,INFANT development ,PHOSPHOLIPIDS ,SELENIUM ,INUIT infants - Abstract
The Inuit population residing in Nunavik (northern Québec, Canada) relies on species from the marine food web for subsistence and is therefore exposed to high doses of environmental contaminants such as polychlorinated biphenyls and methylmercury and to a lesser extent lead. In view of the neurotoxic properties of these substances following developmental exposure, we initiated a study on infant development in this remote coastal population. Here we report the magnitude of prenatal exposure to these contaminants and to selective nutrients in Inuit mothers and their newborns who were recruited on the Hudson Bay coast. We conducted interviews during the women's pregnancies and at 1 and 11 months postpartum and collected biological samples for mercury, lead, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), and chlorinated pesticides analyses as well as selenium and N-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (n3-PUFA). Cord blood, maternal blood, and maternal hair mercury concentrations averaged 18.5 µg/L, 10.4 µg/L, and 3.7 µg/g, respectively, and are similar to those found in the Faroe Islands but lower than those documented in the Seychelles Islands and New Zealand cohorts. Concentrations of PCB congener 153 averaged 86.9, 105.3, and 131.6 µg/kg (lipids) in cord plasma, maternal plasma, and maternal milk, respectively; prenatal exposure to PCBs in the Nunavik cohort is similar to that reported in the Dutch but much lower than those in other Arctic cohorts. Levels of n3-PUFA in plasma phospholipids and selenium in blood are relatively high. The relatively low correlations observed between organochlorine and methylmercury concentrations may make it easier to identify the specific developmental deficits attributable to each toxicant. Similarly, the weak correlations noted between environmental contaminants and nutrients will facilitate the documentation of possible protective effects afforded by either n3-PUFA or selenium against neurotoxic contaminants. Key... [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2001
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11. Determinants of Polychlorinated Biphenyls and Methylmercury Exposure in Inuit Women of Childbearing Age.
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Muckle, Gina, Ayotte, Pierre, Dewailly, Éric, Jacobson, Sandra W., and Jacobson, Joseph L.
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POLYCHLORINATED biphenyls ,METHYLMERCURY ,PREGNANT women ,SELENIUM - Abstract
The objectives of this study were to to identify maternal characteristics associated with traditional food consumption and to examine food items associated with polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and mercury body burden in pregnant Inuit women from Northern Québec. We interviewed women from three communities at mid-pregnancy and at 1 and 11 months postpartum. We measured PCBs, Hg, and selenium in maternal blood; Hg was also measured in maternal hair. The women reported eating significant amounts of fish, beluga muktuk/fat, seal meat, and seal fat. Although consumption of fish and seal was associated with lower socioeconomic status, consumption of beluga whale was uniform across strata. Fish and seal meat consumption was associated with increased Hg concentrations in hair. Traditional food intake during pregnancy was unrelated to PCB body burden, which is more a function of lifetime consumption. This study corroborated previous findings relating marine mammal and fish consumption to increased Hg and selenium body burden. Despite widespread knowledge regarding the presence of these contaminants in traditional foods, a large proportion of Inuit women increased their consumption of these foods during pregnancy, primarily because of pregnancy-related changes in food preferences and the belief that these foods are beneficial during pregnancy. Key words: Canada, Inuit, methylmercury, polychlorinated biphenyls. Environ Health Perspect 109:957-963 (2001). [Online 12 September 2001] http://ehpnet1.niehs.nih.gov/docs/200l/109p957-963muckle/abstr act.html [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2001
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