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   Hair Metal Levels and Childhood Weight Gain  
   
نویسنده vigeh mohsen ,yokoyama kazuhito ,matsukawa takehisa ,shinohara atsuko ,ohtani katsumi ,shariat mamak
منبع iranian journal of public health - 2020 - دوره : 49 - شماره : 8 - صفحه:1510 -1519
چکیده    Background: exposure to toxic metals remains a public health problem with lifelong impacts on childhood growth and development. we aimed to investigate metals effects on preschool children’s anthropometric variables. methods: the study was conducted in tehran, iran, from jul 2013 to mar 2016. we measured scalp hair metal concentrations (lead, cadmium, arsenic, zinc, manganese, and cobalt), using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry, in 207 preschool children’s (36 to 72 months old). results: a significant negative correlation between children's hair lead levels and children's weight was found (r= −0.178, p<0.05). linear regression analysis confirmed the relationship when adjusted for the confounders, including children's age, sex, height, family income, and maternal education (β= −0.191; t= −3.426, p< 0.01). the anova analysis showed a significant (p<0.01) difference between hair lead level and children's weight-for-age percentiles. totally and separately, in almost all weight percentiles, hair lead levels were higher in girls than boys. conclusion: the present study on iranian children showed the current levels of lead exposure might negatively influence on children growth, with higher risk for girls than boys.
کلیدواژه Lead; Children; Gender; Weight; Hair
آدرس tehran university of medical sciences, maternal, fetal, and neonatal research center, Iran. juntendo university, faculty of medicine, department of epidemiology and environmental health, Japan, juntendo university, faculty of medicine, department of epidemiology and environmental health, Japan, juntendo university, faculty of medicine, department of epidemiology and environmental health, Japan, juntendo university, faculty of medicine, department of epidemiology and environmental health, Japan, national institute of occupational safety and health, occupational epidemiology research group, Japan, tehran university of medical sciences, maternal, fetal, and neonatal research center, Iran
 
     
   
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