pica has been researched along with Nervous-System-Diseases* in 3 studies
1 review(s) available for pica and Nervous-System-Diseases
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Pica as a manifestation of iron deficiency.
Pica is the compulsive eating of non-nutritive substances. It is often associated with iron deficiency but its pathophysiology is unknown. Areas covered: We searched the literature using the keywords listed below. Our aim was to describe the phenomenon in its various aspects, to touch briefly on the historical and cultural background, and to examine in more detail the studies that tried to analyze the relative roles of iron deficiency and pica. Expert commentary: Pica is an intriguing symptom known for centuries. Pregnant women and preadolescents are at the highest risk of pica. Iron absorption is reduced in the presence of non-nutritive substances. Iron therapy usually cures the pica behavior. There are different forms of pica, one caused directly by iron deficiency probably due to the lack of iron in some areas of the brain and one more culturally driven and including mostly geophagy. Topics: Anemia, Iron-Deficiency; Female; Humans; Mental Disorders; Nervous System Diseases; Phenotype; Pica; Pregnancy; Pregnancy Complications, Hematologic; Prevalence; Risk Factors | 2016 |
2 other study(ies) available for pica and Nervous-System-Diseases
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Environmental factors associated with blood lead levels in Venezuelan children.
A preliminary study explored the relative contribution of residential sources of lead exposure on mentally challenged children who attend "special education" institutions (GI) compared to a group of age and sex matched school children (G2). We captured descriptive information and analyzed demographic variables, personal and household information, medical effects, environmental exposure factors, and children habits. Home paint, dust, soil, and water sampling was conducted and blood lead (BPb) levels determined. Eighteen G1 and 20 G2 children were studied. The mean G1 BPb was 16.9 +/- 7.9 microg/dl and was significantly higher than that in G2. Fifty percent of G1 children had PbB >20 microg/dl and 72.2% were >10 microg/dl. Low muscular strength, decreased osteotendinose reflexes, fine and gross motricity, deficient equilibrium, and hipotonic muscular tone coincided with >18 microg/dl BPb levels. In 61.1% of G1 homes paint lead levels were higher than permissible levels and 33.3% had dust lead exceeding that level. The high BPb levels in G1 probably resulted from ingestion of household paint, dust, and soil via "hand-to-mouth" activity. Environmental exposure to lead can be an important source of lead intake by infants and children and could affect neurological development. This study provides new insights currently unavailable for these children in Venezuela. Topics: Anthropometry; Child; Child, Preschool; Dust; Environmental Exposure; Female; Humans; Lead; Lead Poisoning, Nervous System, Childhood; Life Style; Male; Nervous System Diseases; Paint; Pica; Pilot Projects; Poverty; Social Class; Soil Pollutants; Spectrophotometry, Atomic; Statistics, Nonparametric; Surveys and Questionnaires; Venezuela; Water Pollutants, Chemical | 2000 |
Neuropsychological dysfunction in children with chronic low-level lead absorption.
To investigate the relation between low-level absorption and neuropsychological function, blind evaluations were under-taken in forty-six symptom-free children aged 3-15 years with blood-lead concentrations of 40-68 mug. per 100 ml. (mean 48 mug. per 100 ml.) and in seventy-eight ethnically and socioeconomically similar controls with levels greater than mug. per 100 ml. (mean 27 mug. per (100 ml). All children lived within 6-6 km. of a large, lead-emitting smelter, and in many cases residence there had been lifelong. Mean age in the lead group was 8-3 years and in the controls 9-3. Testing with Wechsler intelligence scales for schoolchildren and preschool children (W.I.S.C. and W.P.P.S.I.) showed age-adjusted performance I.Q. to be significantly decreased in the group with higher lead levels (mean scores, W.I.S.C. plus W.P.P.S.I., 95 v. 103). Children in all ages in the lead group also had significant slowing in a finger-wrist tapping test. Full-scale I.Q., verbal I.Q., BEHAVIOUR, AND HYPERACTIVITY RATINGS DID NOT DIFFER. Topics: Absorption; Adolescent; Affective Symptoms; Age Factors; Child; Child, Preschool; Cognition Disorders; Colic; Environmental Exposure; Humans; Hyperkinesis; Lead; Lead Poisoning; Motor Skills; Nervous System Diseases; Neurologic Examination; Neurologic Manifestations; Perceptual Disorders; Pica; Seizures; Socioeconomic Factors; Texas; Wechsler Scales | 1975 |