Tehran University of Medical Sciences

Science Communicator Platform

Stay connected! Follow us on X network (Twitter):
Share this content! On (X network) By
Hospital Centered Surveillance of Births in Gaza, Palestine, 2011–2017 and Heavy Metal Contamination of the Mothers Reveals Long-Term Impact of Wars Publisher Pubmed



Manduca P1 ; Al Baraquni N2 ; Al Baraquni L3 ; Abu Abadi D4 ; Abdallah H4 ; Hamad GA4 ; Mosa TA4 ; Balousha S4, 5 ; Miqdad H4 ; Mohammed W4 ; Salah M4 ; El Shawwa R6
Authors
Show Affiliations
Authors Affiliations
  1. 1. NWRG, Italy
  2. 2. Islamic University of Gaza, Palestine
  3. 3. Bond University, Australia
  4. 4. Al Shifa Hospital, Gaza, Palestine
  5. 5. Department of Reproductive Health, Nursing and Midwifery School, International Campus, University of Medical Science, Tehran, Iran
  6. 6. Gaza, Palestine

Source: Reproductive Toxicology Published:2019


Abstract

Prevalence of preterm, low birth weight and birth defects increased significantly since 2011 in Gaza, Palestine. No change in known co-factors of reproductive health justified this rise. Two military attacks in 2012 and 2014 introduced novel risk factors for outcomes at birth: contamination by teratogenic and carcinogenic heavy metals weapon-remnants, ongoing impoverishment, and impaired rehabilitation of waste management. It was previously shown that mothers exposed to military attacks had higher metal load than those unexposed and mother's heavy metals trans-pass placenta. We investigated association in time of heavy metal contamination and reproductive health using hospital-based surveillance (2011–2016–2017) of births, accompanied by assessment in 2016 of metal load in mother and newborn hair. Mother's housing proximal to unmanaged waste predicted preterm birth and birth defects, and these women had highest load of heavy metals. Poor diet predicted low birth weight. Circumstances prevent investigation of heavy metals molecular impact(s) during fetal development. © 2019 Elsevier Inc.