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Higher infant blood lead levels with longer duration of breastfeeding.

Authors :
Lozoff B
Jimenez E
Wolf AW
Angelilli ML
Zatakia J
Jacobson SW
Kaciroti N
Clark KM
Tao M
Castillo M
Walter T
Pino P
Source :
The Journal of pediatrics [J Pediatr] 2009 Nov; Vol. 155 (5), pp. 663-7.
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

Objective: To determine whether longer breastfeeding is associated with higher infant lead concentrations.<br />Study Design: Data were analyzed from 3 studies of developmental effects of iron deficiency in infancy: Costa Rica (1981-1984), Chile (1991-1996), and Detroit (2002-2003). The relation between duration of breastfeeding and lead levels was assessed with Pearson product-moment or partial correlation coefficients.<br />Results: More than 93% of the Costa Rica and Chile samples was breastfed (179 and 323 breastfed infants, respectively; mean weaning age, 8-10 months), as was 35.6% of the Detroit sample (53 breastfed infants; mean weaning age, 4.5 months). Lead concentrations averaged 10.8 microg/dL (Costa Rica, 12-23 months), 7.8 microg/dL (Chile, 12 months), and 2.5 microg/dL (Detroit, 9-10 months). Duration of breastfeeding as sole milk source and total breastfeeding correlated with lead concentration in all samples (r values = 0.14-0.57; P values = .06-<.0001).<br />Conclusions: Longer breastfeeding was associated with higher infant lead concentration in 3 countries, in 3 different decades, in settings differing in breastfeeding patterns, environmental lead sources, and infant lead levels. The results suggest that monitoring lead concentrations in breastfed infants be considered.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1097-6833
Volume :
155
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Journal of pediatrics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
19595371
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpeds.2009.04.032