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Mercury Exposure and Antinuclear Antibodies among Females of Reproductive Age in the United States: NHANES.

Emily C Somers, Martha A Ganser, Jeffrey S Warren, Niladri Basu, Lu Wang et al.
Other Environmental health perspectives 2015 72 citazioni
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

Tipo di studio
Other
Dimensione del campione
1352
Popolazione
None
Intervento
Mercury Exposure and Antinuclear Antibodies among Females of Reproductive Age in the United States: NHANES. None
Comparatore
None
Esito primario
None
Direzione dell'effetto
Mixed
Rischio di bias
Unclear

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Immune dysregulation associated with mercury has been suggested, although data in the general population are lacking. Chronic exposure to low levels of methylmercury (organic) and inorganic mercury is common, such as through fish consumption and dental amalgams. OBJECTIVE: We examined associations between mercury biomarkers and antinuclear antibody (ANA) positivity and titer strength. METHODS: Among females 16-49 years of age (n = 1,352) from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 1999-2004, we examined cross-sectional associations between mercury and ANAs (indirect immunofluorescence; cutoff ≥ 1:80). Three biomarkers of mercury exposure were used: hair (available 1999-2000) and total blood (1999-2004) predominantly represented methylmercury, and urine (1999-2002) represented inorganic mercury. Survey statistics were used. Multivariable modeling adjusted for several covariates, including age and omega-3 fatty acids. RESULTS: Sixteen percent of females were ANA positive; 96% of ANA positives had a nuclear speckled staining pattern. Geometric mean (geometric SD) mercury concentrations were 0.22 (0.03) ppm in hair, 0.92 (0.05) μg/L blood, and 0.62 (0.04) μg/L urine. Hair and blood, but not urinary, mercury were associated with ANA positivity (sample sizes 452, 1,352, and 804, respectively), after adjusting for confounders: for hair, odds ratio (OR) = 4.10 (95% CI: 1.66, 10.13); for blood, OR = 2.32 (95% CI: 1.07, 5.03) comparing highest versus lowest quantiles. Magnitudes of association were strongest for high-titer (≥ 1:1,280) ANA: hair, OR = 11.41 (95% CI: 1.60, 81.23); blood, OR = 5.93 (95% CI: 1.57, 22.47). CONCLUSIONS: Methylmercury, at low levels generally considered safe, was associated with subclinical autoimmunity among reproductive-age females. Autoantibodies may predate clinical disease by years; thus, methylmercury exposure may be relevant to future autoimmune disease risk.

TL;DR

Methylmercury, at low levels generally considered safe, was associated with subclinical autoimmunity among reproductive-age females and autoantibodies may predate clinical disease by years; thus, methylmercuries exposure may be relevant to future autoimmune disease risk.

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