1972
DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-1809.1972.tb00769.x
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Parental exposure to X‐irradiation and Down's syndrome

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Cited by 74 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…If, as has been postulated (Uchida et al, 1968;Lilienfeld and Benesch, 1969;Alberman et al, 1972), increased nondisjunction is associated with the cumulative effects of exposure to environmental agents such as radiation or chemicals, it will be interesting to determine whether the areas showing the most rapid decline in mean maternal age and increase in age specific incidence for young mothers of Down syndrome infants also have higher levels of exposure to such environmental factors. Clearly environmental agents such as diagnostic x-rays, nuclear fallout, exposure to pesticides, and other environmental chemicals have become more significant in recent years and women might be expected to be exposed to threshold doses of these factors at an increasingly early age.…”
Section: Incidence Ratesmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…If, as has been postulated (Uchida et al, 1968;Lilienfeld and Benesch, 1969;Alberman et al, 1972), increased nondisjunction is associated with the cumulative effects of exposure to environmental agents such as radiation or chemicals, it will be interesting to determine whether the areas showing the most rapid decline in mean maternal age and increase in age specific incidence for young mothers of Down syndrome infants also have higher levels of exposure to such environmental factors. Clearly environmental agents such as diagnostic x-rays, nuclear fallout, exposure to pesticides, and other environmental chemicals have become more significant in recent years and women might be expected to be exposed to threshold doses of these factors at an increasingly early age.…”
Section: Incidence Ratesmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Alberman et al, 1972). The practical problems raised by these working hypotheses are numerous and often of great professional and social importance, even, perhaps especially, when radiation exposures are small.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A similar effect was observed in mothers of children with Down's syndrome by comparison with controls. Moreover, older control mothers (30-39) had received twice as much gonadal exposure to radiation as younger controls (< 30), whereas in the corresponding age groups of mothers of Down's children the increase was eight-fold (Alberman et al, 1972). In a prospective study Uchida et al (1968) examined the pregnancy outcome of 861 mothers who received abdominal X-rays prior to pregnancy with the same number of age matched controls; there were eight cases of Down's syndrome born to the study group, and one to the controls.…”
Section: Chromosome Defectsmentioning
confidence: 97%