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Adverse Effects of Methylmercury: Environmental Health Research Implications
Authors:Philippe Grandjean  Hiroshi Satoh  Katsuyuki Murata  Komyo Eto
Institution:1. Department of Environmental Medicine, University of Southern Denmark, Odense, Denmark;2. Department of Environmental Health, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, USA;3. Department of Environmental Health Sciences, Tohoku University Graduate School of Medicine, Sendai, Japan;4. Division of Environmental Health Sciences, Akita University, Akita, Japan;5. National Institute for Minamata Disease, Minamata, Japan
Abstract:

Background

The scientific discoveries of health risks resulting from methylmercury exposure began in 1865 describing ataxia, dysarthria, constriction of visual fields, impaired hearing, and sensory disturbance as symptoms of fatal methylmercury poisoning.

Objective

Our aim was to examine how knowledge and consensus on methylmercury toxicity have developed in order to identify problems of wider concern in research.

Data sources and extraction

We tracked key publications that reflected new insights into human methylmercury toxicity. From this evidence, we identified possible caveats of potential significance for environmental health research in general.

Synthesis

At first, methylmercury research was impaired by inappropriate attention to narrow case definitions and uncertain chemical speciation. It also ignored the link between ecotoxicity and human toxicity. As a result, serious delays affected the recognition of methylmercury as a cause of serious human poisonings in Minamata, Japan. Developmental neurotoxicity was first reported in 1952, but despite accumulating evidence, the vulnerability of the developing nervous system was not taken into account in risk assessment internationally until approximately 50 years later. Imprecision in exposure assessment and other forms of uncertainty tended to cause an underestimation of methylmercury toxicity and repeatedly led to calls for more research rather than prevention.

Conclusions

Coupled with legal and political rigidity that demanded convincing documentation before considering prevention and compensation, types of uncertainty that are common in environmental research delayed the scientific consensus and were used as an excuse for deferring corrective action. Symptoms of methylmercury toxicity, such as tunnel vision, forgetfulness, and lack of coordination, also seemed to affect environmental health research and its interpretation.
Keywords:empirical research  environmental exposure  epidemiology  methylmercury compounds  prevention and control  public policy  seafood  toxicology
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