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Neurobehavioral Performance of Estate Residents with Privately-Treated Water Supply

BACKGROUND: Neurotoxicants present in water supply may affect human functions in terms of attention, response speed and perceptual motor speed. Neurobehavioural performance can be influenced by gender, age and education levels. This study aims to assess the neurobehavioral performance of palm oil es...

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Autores principales: MOHD RIDZWAN, Siti Farizwana, ANUAL, Zurahanim Fasha, SAHANI, Mazrura, GHAZALI, Ahmad Rohi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Tehran University of Medical Sciences 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4441934/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26060639
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author MOHD RIDZWAN, Siti Farizwana
ANUAL, Zurahanim Fasha
SAHANI, Mazrura
GHAZALI, Ahmad Rohi
author_facet MOHD RIDZWAN, Siti Farizwana
ANUAL, Zurahanim Fasha
SAHANI, Mazrura
GHAZALI, Ahmad Rohi
author_sort MOHD RIDZWAN, Siti Farizwana
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Neurotoxicants present in water supply may affect human functions in terms of attention, response speed and perceptual motor speed. Neurobehavioural performance can be influenced by gender, age and education levels. This study aims to assess the neurobehavioral performance of palm oil estate residents with private water supply in southern Peninsular of Malaysia. METHODS: A total of 287 and 246 participants from estates with private (PWS) and public water supply (PUB) were recruited to complete a demographic and subjective symptom questionnaire followed by the Neurobehavioral Core Test Battery (NCTB). RESULTS: PWS participants who consumed privately-treated water performed poorly in all NCTB tests compared to PUB participants except for Santa Ana test. Significant group differences in neurobehavioral performance were found for Digit Span Backward (P=0.047), Benton Visual Retention (P=0.006) and Trail Making B tests (P<0.05); which measures the function of memory, attention and visual perception-conceptual. Gender, age and years of education influenced the NCTB scores (P<0.05). Female participants performed poorly in tests measuring latency but excellently tackled those tests that determined association. Younger participants from both PWS and PUB performed better on NCTB tests when compared to other age groups (P<0.05). PWS and PUB participants in this study who received a longer duration of education excelled in the NCTB tests (P=0.000). CONCLUSION: Poor neurobehavioral performance is associated with low water supply quality which affects neurofunctions in terms of attention, memory, response and perceptual motor speed.
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spelling pubmed-44419342015-06-09 Neurobehavioral Performance of Estate Residents with Privately-Treated Water Supply MOHD RIDZWAN, Siti Farizwana ANUAL, Zurahanim Fasha SAHANI, Mazrura GHAZALI, Ahmad Rohi Iran J Public Health Original Article BACKGROUND: Neurotoxicants present in water supply may affect human functions in terms of attention, response speed and perceptual motor speed. Neurobehavioural performance can be influenced by gender, age and education levels. This study aims to assess the neurobehavioral performance of palm oil estate residents with private water supply in southern Peninsular of Malaysia. METHODS: A total of 287 and 246 participants from estates with private (PWS) and public water supply (PUB) were recruited to complete a demographic and subjective symptom questionnaire followed by the Neurobehavioral Core Test Battery (NCTB). RESULTS: PWS participants who consumed privately-treated water performed poorly in all NCTB tests compared to PUB participants except for Santa Ana test. Significant group differences in neurobehavioral performance were found for Digit Span Backward (P=0.047), Benton Visual Retention (P=0.006) and Trail Making B tests (P<0.05); which measures the function of memory, attention and visual perception-conceptual. Gender, age and years of education influenced the NCTB scores (P<0.05). Female participants performed poorly in tests measuring latency but excellently tackled those tests that determined association. Younger participants from both PWS and PUB performed better on NCTB tests when compared to other age groups (P<0.05). PWS and PUB participants in this study who received a longer duration of education excelled in the NCTB tests (P=0.000). CONCLUSION: Poor neurobehavioral performance is associated with low water supply quality which affects neurofunctions in terms of attention, memory, response and perceptual motor speed. Tehran University of Medical Sciences 2013-12 /pmc/articles/PMC4441934/ /pubmed/26060639 Text en Copyright © Iranian Public Health Association & Tehran University of Medical Sciences This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License which allows users to read, copy, distribute and make derivative works for non-commercial purposes from the material, as long as the author of the original work is cited properly.
spellingShingle Original Article
MOHD RIDZWAN, Siti Farizwana
ANUAL, Zurahanim Fasha
SAHANI, Mazrura
GHAZALI, Ahmad Rohi
Neurobehavioral Performance of Estate Residents with Privately-Treated Water Supply
title Neurobehavioral Performance of Estate Residents with Privately-Treated Water Supply
title_full Neurobehavioral Performance of Estate Residents with Privately-Treated Water Supply
title_fullStr Neurobehavioral Performance of Estate Residents with Privately-Treated Water Supply
title_full_unstemmed Neurobehavioral Performance of Estate Residents with Privately-Treated Water Supply
title_short Neurobehavioral Performance of Estate Residents with Privately-Treated Water Supply
title_sort neurobehavioral performance of estate residents with privately-treated water supply
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4441934/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26060639
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