Four Cases of Abnormal Neuropsychological Findings in Children with High Blood Methylmercury Concentrations

  • Hong Y
  • Kim D
  • Yu S
  • et al.
N/ACitations
Citations of this article
18Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Background Methylmercury (MeHg) easily crosses the blood–brain barrier and accumulates in the brain. Accumulated MeHg will cause neurological symptoms. We report four pediatric cases of neuropsychological findings with high blood MeHg concentrations. Case presentation Four children were admitted for follow-up study because their total mercury (THg) concentration in the blood was found to be high during a national survey. Case 1 was a 9- year-old female with a 16.6 µg/ℓ blood THg concentration in the survey. During admission, the blood (THg), hair THg, and blood MeHg concentration(mercury indices) were 21.4 µg/ℓ, 7.2 µg/g, and 20.1 µg/ℓ, respectively. In our neuropsychological examination, cognitive impairment and attention deficit were observed. Her diet included fish intake 2–3 times per week, and she had been diagnosed with epilepsy at 3 years of age. Case 2 was a 12-year-old male with blood THg of 15.4 µg/ℓ in the survey and the mercury indices were 12.7 µg/ℓ, 5.7 µg/g, and 11.8 µg/ℓ, respectively, on admission. He was also observed to have attention- deficit/hyperactivity disorder. Case 3 was a 10-year-old male child with blood THg of 17.4 µg/ℓ in the survey, and the mercury indices on admission were 21.6 µg/ℓ, 7.5 µg/g and 21.5 µg/ℓ, respectively. In his case, mild attention deficit was observed. Case 4 was a 9-year-old male with blood THg of 20.6 µg/ℓ in the survey and the mercury indices were 18.9 µg/ℓ, 8.3 µg/g, and 14.4 µg/ℓ, respectively, on admission. Mild attention difficulty was observed. Conclusion We suggest that fish consumption may be the main source of MeHg exposure, and that MeHg may have been the cause of the neuropsychological deficits in these cases. Keywords

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Hong, Y.-S., Kim, D.-S., Yu, S.-D., Kim, S.-H., Kim, J.-K., Kim, Y.-M., … Kim, B.-G. (2013). Four Cases of Abnormal Neuropsychological Findings in Children with High Blood Methylmercury Concentrations. Annals of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 25(1), 18. https://doi.org/10.1186/2052-4374-25-18

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free