Litcius/Paper detail

Heavy metal contamination in Peru: implications on children’s health

Xulia Fandiño Piñeiro, Mauro Trincado Ave, Narmeen Mallah, Francisco Caamaño‐Isorna, A. Nuria Guisández Jiménez, Duarte Nuno Vieira, Flaviano Bianchini, José Ignacio Muñóz Barús

2021Scientific Reports38 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cerro de Pasco, Peru, has been excessively contaminated with heavy metals due to high mining activities in the region. We investigated the presence of chronic exposure to heavy metals in children living in Cerro de Pasco and its effect on health. Heavy metal concentrations were determined in hair samples collected from 78 children living in a region exposed to an open-pit mine (Paragsha region) and from other 16 children unexposed to mine activities (Carhuamayo region). Children exposed to the mine showed statistically significant higher concentration of aluminum, antimony, arsenic, cadmium, chromium, iron, lead, tin and thallium (p < 0.05) than control children. Hair samples collected from the same children in two occasions (2016 and 2018) showed that the exposure is chronic with higher levels of heavy metals observed in 2018. The concentration of heavy metals was higher in hair tip than in hair root samples. Heavy metals are associated with substantial higher risk of nosebleed (odds ratio, OR = 15.40), chronic colic (OR = 7.30), dermatologic alterations (OR = 6.16), mood alterations (OR = 7.07), presence of white lines on nails (OR = 12.10), reduced visual camp (OR = 3.97) and other symptoms (OR = 5.12). Chronic heavy metal exposure implies various negative consequences on children's health. Preventive measures are crucial to protect children's health.

Topics & Concepts

CadmiumHeavy metalsArsenicMedicineChromiumOdds ratioMetalMercury (programming language)Environmental healthEnvironmental chemistryToxicologyChemistryBiologyInternal medicineComputer scienceOrganic chemistryProgramming languageHeavy Metal Exposure and ToxicityTherapeutic Uses of Natural ElementsHeavy metals in environment
Heavy metal contamination in Peru: implications on children’s health | Litcius