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Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine logoLink to Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine
. 2006 Mar;11(2):65–68. doi: 10.1007/BF02898144

Retrospectivein utero exposure assessment of PCBs using preserved umbilical cords and its application to case-control comparison

Takamitsu Otake 1,, Jun Yoshinaga 1,, Yoshie Seki 2, Toru Matsumura 2, Keiichiro Watanabe 3, Michiko Ishijima 3, Nobumasa Kato 3
PMCID: PMC2723634  PMID: 21432364

Abstract

Objectives

The aim of this study is to assess preserved umbilical cords as chemical exposure media to investigatein utero chemical exposure. Furthermore, we aim to apply preserved umbilical cords to retrospective studies of the relationship betweenin utero chemical exposure and neurodevelopment disorders.

Methods

Two sets of preserved umbilical cord samples were analyzed for exposure to polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs): one composed of samples from 20 healthy Japanese subjects and the other set included samples from 17 autistic patients and 7 healthy sibling of theirs.

Results

The possibility of external PCBs contamination during storage of preserved umbilical cord samples was found, and due to this problem, the study design should be limited to the comparison between PCBs concentration in preserved cord samples from autistic patients and that in those from their sibling. Total PCBs concentrations in preserved cords from autistic patients and their control siblings were compared and we found no statistically significant difference between them (Wilcoxon signed rank test, p>0.05).

Conclusions

The association between autism andin utero PCBs exposure was not clarified in this study; however, retrospective studies such as a case-control study of siblings using preserved umbilical cords can be a method of choice for examining the possible relationship betweenin utero chemical exposure and child hood disorders.

Key words: retrospective study, preserved umbilical cord, prenatal exposure, polychlorinated biphenyls, childhood disorder

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