The association of prenatal phthalates, organophosphorous pesticides, and organophosphate esters with early child language ability in Norway.

Autor: Ramos, Amanda M.1 (AUTHOR) aramos32@email.unc.edu, Herring, Amy H.2 (AUTHOR), Villanger, Gro D.3 (AUTHOR), Thomsen, Cathrine4 (AUTHOR), Sakhi, Amrit K.4 (AUTHOR), Cequier, Enrique4 (AUTHOR), Aase, Heidi3 (AUTHOR), Engel, Stephanie M.1 (AUTHOR)
Předmět:
Zdroj: Environmental Research. May2023, Vol. 225, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Abstrakt: Prenatal exposure to phthalates, organophosphate esters, and organophosphorous pesticides have been associated with neurodevelopmental deficits including language ability, however, few studies consider the effect of exposure mixtures and the potential longitudinal detriments over time. This study examines the influence of prenatal exposure to phthalates, organophosphate esters, and organophosphorous pesticides, on children's language ability from toddlerhood to the preschool period. This study includes 299 mother-child dyads from Norway in the Norwegian Mother, Father and Child Cohort Study (MoBa). Prenatal exposure to chemicals were assessed at 17 weeks' gestation, and child language skills were assessed at 18 months using the Ages and Stages Questionnaire communication subscale and at preschool age using the Child Development Inventory. We ran two structural equation models to examine the simultaneous influences of chemical exposures on parent-reported and teacher-reported child language ability. Prenatal organophosphorous pesticides were negatively associated with preschool language ability through language ability at 18 months. Additionally, there was a negative association between low molecular weight phthalates and teacher-reported preschool language ability. There was no effect of prenatal organophosphate esters on child language ability at either 18 months or preschool age. This study adds to the literature on prenatal exposure to chemicals and neurodevelopment and highlights the importance of developmental pathways in early childhood. • We assessed prenatal chemical mixtures on early child language ability. • Early language ability mediated prenatal pesticides and low preschool language. • Prenatal phthalates were associated with lower preschool-age language ability. • This study advances the literature by considering cascading, and age-specific effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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