2007
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijheh.2007.01.035
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The German Human Biomonitoring Commission

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Cited by 165 publications
(114 citation statements)
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References 35 publications
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“…Its effects on birth outcomes, however, particularly at moderate exposures, are not well understood and in this regard Cd has received far less research attention than its near neighbours in the periodic table, lead and mercury, The placenta is thought to be at least a partial barrier to Cd transfer to the fetus,5, 6 but determination of ratios of Cd in cord blood : maternal blood have left this in doubt (ratios ranging from 0.247 to 1.08,8 with others finding intermediate values9, 10). Studies with moderate maternal blood cadmium levels (B‐Cd; below a suggested reference value of 1 μg/L11) and adjustment for smoking have generally found no associations with birthweight, birth length, head circumference or preterm delivery,8, 12, 13 but other studies have found negative associations particularly with birthweight14, 15, 16 (Table S1). Even where exposure levels are higher and effects could potentially be more evident, again some studies have found no associations with birth outcomes,10, 17 while others have found adverse associations 18.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Its effects on birth outcomes, however, particularly at moderate exposures, are not well understood and in this regard Cd has received far less research attention than its near neighbours in the periodic table, lead and mercury, The placenta is thought to be at least a partial barrier to Cd transfer to the fetus,5, 6 but determination of ratios of Cd in cord blood : maternal blood have left this in doubt (ratios ranging from 0.247 to 1.08,8 with others finding intermediate values9, 10). Studies with moderate maternal blood cadmium levels (B‐Cd; below a suggested reference value of 1 μg/L11) and adjustment for smoking have generally found no associations with birthweight, birth length, head circumference or preterm delivery,8, 12, 13 but other studies have found negative associations particularly with birthweight14, 15, 16 (Table S1). Even where exposure levels are higher and effects could potentially be more evident, again some studies have found no associations with birth outcomes,10, 17 while others have found adverse associations 18.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To identify possible trends between the 4 groups (control, low-exposed, medium-exposed, high-exposed) the linear trend test was applied. To compare normal-distributed metric Human Biomonitoring Commission [46,47]. The selection of threshold values applied for this study was discussed in our former papers [16,19,48].…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is aimed to aid in data interpretation by statistical derivation of reference values and toxicological-epidemiological derivation of HBM-values I and II (see below). Additionally, the HBM-Commission was asked to make recommendations concerning chemical exposures to the public health services, individuals, the general population and policy makers [24]. Recommendations of this kind are needed to ensure well maintained health status of the population, to control the success of chemicals policy and to further develop it.…”
Section: The Human Biomonitoring Commissionmentioning
confidence: 99%