Science study says that Boys
Appear to Be More Vulnerable Than Girls to the Insecticide Chlorpyrifos: Lower
IQs Seen in Boys Exposed in the Womb to Comparable Amounts of the Chemical.
A new study is the first to find a
difference between how boys and girls respond to prenatal exposure to the
insecticide chlorpyrifos. Researchers at the Columbia Center for Children's
Environmental Health (CCCEH) at the Mailman School of Public Health found that,
at age 7, boys had greater difficulty with working memory, a key component of
IQ, than girls with similar exposures. On the plus side, having nurturing
parents improved working memory, especially in boys, although it did not lessen
the negative cognitive effects of exposure to the chemical.
Results are published online in the
journal Neurotoxicology and Teratology.
In 2011, research led by Virginia
Rauh, ScD, Co-Deputy Director of CCCEH, established a connection between
prenatal exposure to chlorpyrifos and deficits in working memory and IQ at age
7. Earlier this year, a follow-up study showed evidence in MRI scans that even
low to moderate levels of exposure during pregnancy may lead to long-term,
potentially irreversible changes in the brain. The latest study, led by Megan
Horton, PhD, explored the impact of sex differences and the home environment on
these health outcomes.
Dr. Horton and colleagues looked at
a subset of 335 mother-child pairs enrolled in the ongoing inner-city study of
environmental exposures, including measures of prenatal chlorpyrifos in
umbilical cord blood.
When the children reached age 3, the
researchers measured the home environment using the Home Observation for
Measurement of the Environment (HOME) criteria, including two main categories:
1) environmental stimulation,
defined as the availability of intellectually stimulating materials in the home
and the mother's encouragement of learning;
2) parental nurturance, defined as
attentiveness, displays of physical affection, encouragement of delayed
gratification, limit setting, and the ability of the mother to control her
negative reactions.
The researchers tested IQ at age 7.
While home environment and sex had
no moderating effect on IQ deficits related to chlorpyrifos exposure, the
researchers uncovered two intriguing findings related to sex differences,
albeit of borderline statistical strength: first, that chlorpyrifos exposure
had a greater adverse cognitive impact in boys as compared to girls, lowering
working memory scores by an average of three points more in boys than girls
(96.5 vs. 99.8); and second, that parental nurturing was associated with better
working memory, particularly in boys.
"There's something about boys
that makes them a little more susceptible to both bad exposures and good
exposures," says Dr. Horton. "One possible explanation for the
greater sensitivity to chlorpyrifos is that the insecticide acts as an
endocrine disruptor to suppress sex-specific hormones. In a study of rats,
exposure to the chemical reduced testosterone, which plays a critical role in
the development of the male brain."
Going forward, Dr. Horton will look
at how sex and the home environment may influence the effects of prenatal
exposure to other environmental toxicants, such as those found in air
pollution. "I expect this information will be useful in efforts to develop
new interventions to protect children from the potentially negative
consequences of early exposure to harmful chemicals," says Dr. Horton.
The insecticide chlorpyrifos was
widely used in homes until 2001 when the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
restricted indoor residential use, permitting continued commercial and
agricultural applications. Since that time, a drop in residential levels of
chlorpyrifos has been documented by Robin Whyatt, DrPH, Co-Deputy Director of
CCCEH. The chemical continues to be present in the environment through its
widespread use in agriculture (food and feed crops), wood treatments, and
public spaces such as golf courses, some parks, and highway medians. People
near these sources can be exposed by inhaling the chemical, which drifts on the
wind. Low-level exposure can also occur by eating fruits and vegetables that
have been sprayed with chlorpyrifos. Although the chemical is degraded rapidly
by water and sunlight outdoors, it has been detected by the Columbia
researchers in many urban residences several years after the ban went into
effect. Many developing countries continue to use chlorpyrifos in the home
setting.
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