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Social Ecology of Children’s Vulnerability to Environmental Pollutants

BACKGROUND: The outcomes of exposure to neurotoxic chemicals early in life depend on the properties of both the chemical and the host’s environment. When our questions focus on the toxicant, the environmental properties tend to be regarded as marginal and designated as covariates or confounders. Suc...

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Autores principales: Weiss, Bernard, Bellinger, David C.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1626436/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17035129
http://dx.doi.org/10.1289/ehp.9101
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author Weiss, Bernard
Bellinger, David C.
author_facet Weiss, Bernard
Bellinger, David C.
author_sort Weiss, Bernard
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The outcomes of exposure to neurotoxic chemicals early in life depend on the properties of both the chemical and the host’s environment. When our questions focus on the toxicant, the environmental properties tend to be regarded as marginal and designated as covariates or confounders. Such approaches blur the reality of how the early environment establishes enduring biologic substrates. OBJECTIVES: In this commentary, we describe another perspective, based on decades of biopsychological research on animals, that shows how the early, even prenatal, environment creates permanent changes in brain structure and chemistry and behavior. Aspects of the early environment—encompassing enrichment, deprivation, and maternal and neonatal stress—all help determine the functional responses later in life that derive from the biologic substrate imparted by that environment. Their effects then become biologically embedded. Human data, particularly those connected to economically disadvantaged populations, yield equivalent conclusions. DISCUSSION: In this commentary, we argue that treating such environmental conditions as confounders is equivalent to defining genetic differences as confounders, a tactic that laboratory research, such as that based on transgenic manipulations, clearly rejects. The implications extend from laboratory experiments that, implicitly, assume that the early environment can be standardized to risk assessments based on epidemiologic investigations. CONCLUSIONS: The biologic properties implanted by the early social environment should be regarded as crucial elements of the translation from laboratory research to human health and, in fact, should be incorporated into human health research. The methods for doing so are not clearly defined and present many challenges to investigators.
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spelling pubmed-16264362006-11-08 Social Ecology of Children’s Vulnerability to Environmental Pollutants Weiss, Bernard Bellinger, David C. Environ Health Perspect Commentaries BACKGROUND: The outcomes of exposure to neurotoxic chemicals early in life depend on the properties of both the chemical and the host’s environment. When our questions focus on the toxicant, the environmental properties tend to be regarded as marginal and designated as covariates or confounders. Such approaches blur the reality of how the early environment establishes enduring biologic substrates. OBJECTIVES: In this commentary, we describe another perspective, based on decades of biopsychological research on animals, that shows how the early, even prenatal, environment creates permanent changes in brain structure and chemistry and behavior. Aspects of the early environment—encompassing enrichment, deprivation, and maternal and neonatal stress—all help determine the functional responses later in life that derive from the biologic substrate imparted by that environment. Their effects then become biologically embedded. Human data, particularly those connected to economically disadvantaged populations, yield equivalent conclusions. DISCUSSION: In this commentary, we argue that treating such environmental conditions as confounders is equivalent to defining genetic differences as confounders, a tactic that laboratory research, such as that based on transgenic manipulations, clearly rejects. The implications extend from laboratory experiments that, implicitly, assume that the early environment can be standardized to risk assessments based on epidemiologic investigations. CONCLUSIONS: The biologic properties implanted by the early social environment should be regarded as crucial elements of the translation from laboratory research to human health and, in fact, should be incorporated into human health research. The methods for doing so are not clearly defined and present many challenges to investigators. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences 2006-10 2006-05-10 /pmc/articles/PMC1626436/ /pubmed/17035129 http://dx.doi.org/10.1289/ehp.9101 Text en http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/mark/1.0/ Publication of EHP lies in the public domain and is therefore without copyright. All text from EHP may be reprinted freely. Use of materials published in EHP should be acknowledged (for example, ?Reproduced with permission from Environmental Health Perspectives?); pertinent reference information should be provided for the article from which the material was reproduced. Articles from EHP, especially the News section, may contain photographs or illustrations copyrighted by other commercial organizations or individuals that may not be used without obtaining prior approval from the holder of the copyright.
spellingShingle Commentaries
Weiss, Bernard
Bellinger, David C.
Social Ecology of Children’s Vulnerability to Environmental Pollutants
title Social Ecology of Children’s Vulnerability to Environmental Pollutants
title_full Social Ecology of Children’s Vulnerability to Environmental Pollutants
title_fullStr Social Ecology of Children’s Vulnerability to Environmental Pollutants
title_full_unstemmed Social Ecology of Children’s Vulnerability to Environmental Pollutants
title_short Social Ecology of Children’s Vulnerability to Environmental Pollutants
title_sort social ecology of children’s vulnerability to environmental pollutants
topic Commentaries
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1626436/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17035129
http://dx.doi.org/10.1289/ehp.9101
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