5 results on '"Legrand, Melissa"'
Search Results
2. Methylmercury Blood Guidance Values for Canada
- Author
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Legrand, Melissa, Feeley, Mark, Tikhonov, Constantine, Schoen, Deborah, and Li-Muller, Angela
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Maternal and fetal exposure to cadmium, lead, manganese and mercury: The MIREC study.
- Author
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Arbuckle, Tye E., Liang, Chun Lei, Morisset, Anne-Sophie, Fisher, Mandy, Weiler, Hope, Cirtiu, Ciprian Mihai, Legrand, Melissa, Davis, Karelyn, Ettinger, Adrienne S., and Fraser, William D.
- Subjects
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EXPOSURE therapy , *PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of cadmium , *PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of lead , *PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of manganese , *PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of mercury , *FETUS , *TOXINS , *CORD blood - Abstract
Given the susceptibility of the fetus to toxicants, it is important to estimate their exposure. Approximately 2000 pregnant women were recruited in 2008–2011 from 10 cities across Canada. Cd, Pb, Mn and total Hg were measured in maternal blood from the 1st and 3rd trimesters, umbilical cord blood, and infant meconium. Nutrient intakes of vitamin D, iron, and calcium (Ca) were assessed using a food frequency questionnaire and a dietary supplement questionnaire. Median concentrations in 1st trimester maternal blood (n = 1938) were 0.20, 8.79 and 0.70 μg/L for Cd, Mn and Hg, respectively, and 0.60 μg/dL for Pb. While the median difference between the paired 1st and 3rd trimester concentrations of Cd was 0, there was a significant decrease in Pb (0.04 μg/dL) and Hg (0.12 μg/L) and an increase in Mn (3.30 μg/L) concentrations over the course of the pregnancy. While Cd was rarely detected in cord blood (19%) or meconium (3%), median Pb (0.77 μg/dL), Mn (31.87 μg/L) and Hg (0.80 μg/L) concentrations in cord blood were significantly higher than in maternal blood. Significant negative associations were observed between estimated Ca intake and maternal Cd, Pb, Mn and Hg, as well as cord blood Pb. Vitamin D intake was associated with lower maternal Cd, Pb, and Mn as well as Pb in cord blood. Even at current metal exposure levels, increasing dietary Ca and vitamin D intake during pregnancy may be associated with lower maternal blood Pb and Cd concentrations and lower Pb in cord blood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Phthalate and bisphenol A exposure among pregnant women in Canada — Results from the MIREC study.
- Author
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Arbuckle, Tye E., Davis, Karelyn, Marro, Leonora, Fisher, Mandy, Legrand, Melissa, LeBlanc, Alain, Gaudreau, Eric, Foster, Warren G., Choeurng, Voleak, and Fraser, William D.
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PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of chemicals , *BISPHENOL A , *PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of phthalate esters , *MATERNAL health , *ENDOCRINE disruptors , *NEURODEVELOPMENTAL treatment , *HUMAN reproduction - Abstract
Abstract: Bisphenol A (BPA) and phthalates are endocrine disruptors possibly linked to adverse reproductive and neurodevelopmental outcomes. These chemicals have commonly been measured in urine in population surveys; however, such data are limited for large populations of pregnant women, especially for the critical first trimester of pregnancy. The aim of the study was to measure BPA and phthalate metabolites in first trimester urine samples collected in a large national-scale pregnancy cohort study and to identify major predictors of exposure. Approximately 2000 women were recruited in the first trimester of pregnancy from ten sites across Canada. A questionnaire was administered to obtain demographic and socio-economic data on participants and a spot urine sample was collected and analyzed for total BPA (GC–MS/MS) and 11 phthalate metabolites (LC–MS/MS). The geometric mean (GM) maternal urinary concentration of total BPA, uncorrected for specific gravity, was 0.80 (95% CI 0.76–0.85) μg/L. Almost 88% of the women had detectable urinary concentrations of BPA. An analysis of urinary concentrations of BPA by maternal characteristics with specific gravity as a covariate in the linear model showed that the geometric mean concentrations: (1) decreased with increasing maternal age, (2) were higher in current smokers or women who quit during pregnancy compared to never smokers, and (3) tended to be higher in women who provided a fasting urine sample and who were born in Canada, and had lower incomes and education. Several of the phthalate metabolites analyzed were not prevalent in this population (MCHP, MMP, MiNP, MOP), with percentages detectable at less than 15%. The phthalate metabolites with the highest measured concentrations were MEP (GM: 32.02μg/L) and MnBP (GM: 11.59μg/L). MBzP urinary concentrations decreased with maternal age but did not differ by time of urine collection; whereas the DEHP metabolites tended to be higher in older women and when the urine was collected later in the day. This study provides the first biomonitoring results for the largest population of pregnant women sampled in the first trimester of pregnancy. The results indicate that exposure among this population of pregnant women to these chemicals is comparable to or even lower than that observed in a Canadian national population-based survey. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Temporal variation of total mercury levels in the hair of pregnant women from the Maternal-Infant Research on Environmental Chemicals (MIREC) study.
- Author
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Lukina, Anna O., Fisher, Mandy, Khoury, Cheryl, Than, John, Guay, Mireille, Paradis, Jean-François, Arbuckle, Tye E., and Legrand, Melissa
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MECONIUM , *PREGNANT women , *CORD blood , *MERCURY , *HAIR , *BLOOD-brain barrier - Abstract
Prenatal exposure to total mercury (T-Hg) comes from both natural and anthropogenic sources. T-Hg can cross the blood-brain and placental barriers, and may be associated with future neurological and physiological dysfunctions. Scalp hair is an optimal and non-invasive indicator of chronic T-Hg exposure. As part of the Maternal-Infant Research on Environmental Chemicals (MIREC) Study, hair samples from 350 women were collected within weeks after giving birth, to determine temporal variations in T-Hg levels from preconception to delivery, and to compare these levels to corresponding levels measured in other matrices (maternal and umbilical cord blood, and infant's meconium). A maximum of 12 one-cm hair segments were cut starting at the scalp; segments closer to the scalp reflected recent exposure (within the last month). For proper comparison, the hair segments were matched with the collection dates for other matrices. GM hair T-Hg levels greatly decreased during pregnancy, from 0.26 μg g−1 (preconception or full-length hair) to 0.18 μg g−1 (at delivery or segments closer to the scalp). A similar decreasing trend was found for T-Hg in maternal blood: 1st trimester (0.60 μg L−1) to 3rd trimester (0.47 μg L−1). The median hair-to-blood ratios of T-Hg levels varied from 364 (1st trimester), to 408 (3rd trimester), to 229 (cord blood). Very low T-Hg levels were detected in meconium. Mercury levels in blood and hair correlated with consumption of large predatory fish. • Mercury exposure was evaluated in the pan-Canadian MIREC pregnancy cohort. • T-Hg levels in scalp hair significantly decreased during pregnancy, from conception to delivery. • T-Hg levels in hair were significantly correlated with T-Hg levels in blood. • Median hair-to-blood ratios of T-Hg levels increased from 364 to 408 during pregnancy. • Consumption of predatory fish weakly correlated with T-Hg levels in hair and blood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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