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J Child Neurol. 2004 Jun;19(6):431-4.

Mercury exposure in children with autistic spectrum disorder: case-control study.

Ip P, Wong V, Ho M, Lee J, Wong W.

Division of Neurodevelopmental Paediatrics, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong.

Erratum in:

  • J Child Neurol. 2007 Nov;22(11):1324.

Comment in:

Although mercury has been proven to be a neurotoxicant, there is a lack of data to evaluate the causal relationship between mercury and autism. We aim to see if there is increased mercury exposure in children with autistic spectrum disorder. We performed a cross-sectional cohort study over a 5-month period in 2000 to compare the hair and blood mercury levels of children with autistic spectrum disorder (n = 82; mean age 7.2 years) and a control group of normal children (n = 55; mean age 7.8 years). There was no difference in the mean mercury levels. The mean blood mercury levels of the autistic and control groups were 19.53 and 17.68 nmol/L, respectively (P = .15), and the mean hair mercury levels of the autistic and control groups were 2.26 and 2.07 ppm, respectively (P = .79). Thus, the results from our cohort study with similar environmental mercury exposure indicate that there is no causal relationship between mercury as an environmental neurotoxin and autism.

PMID: 15446391 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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