Engelsk titel: Environmental toxins in breast milk
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Författare:
Bratlid D
Email: dag.bratlid@ntnu.no
Språk: Nor
Antal referenser: 42
Dokumenttyp:
Översikt
UI-nummer: 10011162
Sammanfattning
Background. Breast milk is very important to ensure infants a well-composed and safe diet during the first year of life. However, the quality of breast milk seems to be affected by an increasing amount of environmental toxins (particularly so-called Persistent, Bioaccumulative Toxins [PBTs]). Many concerns have been raised about the negative effects this may have on infant health.
Material and methods. The article is a review of literature (mainly review articles) identified through a non-systematic search in PubMed.
Results. The concentration of PBTs in breast milk is mainly caused by man’s position as the terminal link in the nutritional chain. Many breast-fed infants have a daily intake of such toxins that exceed limits defined for the population in general. Animal studies demonstrate effects on endocrine function and neurotoxicity in the offspring, and a number of human studies seem to point in the same direction. However the «original» optimal composition of breast milk still seems to protect against long-term effects of such toxicity.
Interpretation. There is international consensus about the need to monitor breast milk for the presence of PBTs. Such surveillance will be a good indicator of the population’s general exposure to these toxins and may also contribute to identifying groups as risk who should not breast-feed their children for a long time.