Fish Consumption and Prenatal Mercury Exposure


Autoria(s): Chancy, Ruben
Data(s)

13/03/2005

Resumo

Methyl mercury levels in fish tissues have recently become a health issue. Does this toxin adversely affect humans to the point that fish consumption should be severely limited? Health effects of high levels of mercury exposure to human adults are fairly well known, however the effects of lower levels of exposure on human fetal development are less understood. Recent guidelines issued by the United States Food and Drug Agency and the Environmental Protection Agency recommended that pregnant women should refrain from consuming some types of fish, and limit consumption to certain levels, but results of health studies used to develop recommendations were inconclusive when low levels of in-utero methyl mercury exposure were compared. Other studies demonstrated health benefits of fish consumption to developing fetuses. These health benefits may be an over-riding factor, and my interpretation of various studies concludes that restricted consumption of some fish species may be premature at this time due to a need to balance potential health benefits against mercury toxicity hazard.

Identificador

http://digitalcommons.du.edu/ucol_epm/141

Publicador

Digital Commons @ DU

Fonte

Environmental Policy Management

Palavras-Chave #EPA; Faroe Islands; FDA; Fish as food -- Contamination; Mercury -- Toxicology; Mercury in the body; methyl mercury; Methylmercury; Minamata; New Zealand; Seychelles
Tipo

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