Montserrat Marqués Bueno

Montserrat Marqués Bueno

Montserrat Marqués Bueno
Cargo

Researcher at the Laboratory of Toxicology and Environmental Health, Department of Basic Medical Sciences, Universitat Rovira i Virgili.

Prenatal exposure to a mixture of endocrine disruptors is associated with poorer metabolic health in childhood

A study conducted in Spain and five other European countries shows that exposure to mixtures of endocrine disruptors during pregnancy is associated with metabolic health problems in children. The research, published in JAMA Network Open, followed more than 1,100 mother-child pairs between 2003 and 2016 and found a correlation between measures of metabolic dysfunction in children aged 6-11 years, and their prenatal exposure to chemicals such as metals or organochlorine pesticides, among others. According to the authors, these results could be related to the current increase in metabolic syndrome across the lifespan, which results in an increased risk of cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes. 

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Reaction: study associates childhood exposure to pesticides with earlier puberty

A study in Spanish children, with follow-up from pregnancy to adolescence, has found an association between children's exposure to pesticides and fungicides and earlier breast development in girls and genital development in boys. The work has been carried out by the University of Granada (UGR), the Institute for Biosanitary Research (ibs.GRANADA) and CIBERESP (ISCIII).

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