Spontaneous Abortions Possibly Related To Ingestion Of Nitrate Contaminated Well Water
LaGrange County, Indiana, 1991-1994
Source:
Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report
July 5, 1996 / Vol. 45 / No. 26
Published by the Centers for Disease Control
U. S. Department of Health and Human Services
Vol. 45 / No. 26 MMWR 569-572
Health effects associated with ingestion of nitrate-contaminated water have included methemoglobinemia (i.e., blue baby syndrome) in infants ( 1 ) and spontaneous abortions in laboratory animals and livestock (2,3 ); however, only one study in humans has reported an association between increased methemoglobin levels and spontaneous abortion (4 ). During March 1993, the LaGrange County (Indiana) Health Department (LCHD) identified three women who reported a total of six spontaneous abortions during 1991-1993 and who resided in proximity to each other: each had obtained drinking water from nitrate-contaminated private wells in LaGrange County (1995 population: 29,350). LCHD was subsequently notified about a fourth woman from another part of the county who had had two spontaneous abortions after she had moved into a new home with a nitrate-contaminated private well. This report summarizes the investigations of these reports by LCHD, which indicate the need for further assessment of a possible relation between ingesting nitrate-contaminated water and spontaneous abortion.
Patient
1.
During May 1991-December 1992, a 35-year-old woman
had four consecutive spontaneous abortions: the first
three at 8 weeks gestation, and the fourth at 11 weeks.
Karyotyping of one fetus did not identify a genetic
explanation for the spontaneous abortion. During the
investigation of this case, a neighbor was identified who
also had reported a spontaneous abortion (patient 2).
Patient 2. During March 1993, a 37-year-old woman
who resided one half mile from patient 1 had spontaneous
abortion of her second pregnancy at 8 weeks gestation.
Her first pregnancy (which occurred at age 34, before
moving to the current home) had resulted in the birth of
a full-term live-born infant. During the investigation of
patients 1 and 2 another neighbor reported to LCHD a
history of a recent spontaneous abortion (patient 3).
Patient 3. During July 1993, a 20-year-old woman
who resided approximately 1 mile from patient 1 had
spontaneous abortion of her first pregnancy during the
8th week of gestation.
To
determine possible causes of this cluster of spontaneous
abortions in the three women, LCHD conducted an
environmental investigation during June-September 1993. A
well located on a hog farm in the vicinity of the
residences of patients 1-3 had been documented to be
nitrate contaminated 1>50 mg/L) in 1989; LCHD had been
notified about this contamination in 1990. Because or the
proximity of the residences or patients 1-3 and the
hog-confinement facility. persons in all 19 residences
within 3 miles down gradient (i.e.. the direction the
groundwater was moving) of the hog confinement facility
were interviewed regarding illness and reproductive
histories. Nine women of childbearing age lived in these
residences, including the three patients whose
spontaneous abortions had been investigated by LCHD. Five
other women each reported having a full-term birth during
the preceding 2 years. Water samples from the 19 wells
serving the residences were tested for bacteria and
nitrates. For patients 2 and 3, water samples also were
analyzed for volatile and semivolatile compounds,
pesticides, metals, inorganic compounds, and coliform
bacteria.
Nitrate was the only contaminant in well water present at
elevated levels. In the wells serving the households of
patients 1-3, nitrate levels were 19.0mg/L, 26.0 mg/L,
and 19.2 mg/L, respectively {Environmental Protection
Agency [EPA] maximum contaminant [MCL] for nitrate: 10.0
mg/L). In comparison for the five households in which
women reported giving birth to full-term, live-born
infants, drinking water nitrate levels ranged from 1.6
mg/L to 8.4 mg/L {mean: 3.1 mg/L).
An LCHD investigation of potential sources of nitrate
contamination of the household wells indicated that the
probable source of groundwater contamination was animal
waste from the hog-confinement facility. This facility
was located approximately one half mile from the
residence of patient 1, 1 mile from patient 2, three
fourths mile from patient 3, and approximately 2 miles
from the residences of women reporting full-term births.
After
completing the investigations of patients 1-3, LCHD
investigated a fourth case of spontaneous abortion in a
35-year-old woman who lived approximately 10 miles from
the other three women. She had had five live births
during 1984~1992. The woman's doctor reported to LCHD
that she had had two spontaneous abortions during April
and August 1994, both at 8 weeks' gestation: the first
occurred 24 months after the birth of her fifth child and
44 months after beginning use of a new well. A mean
nitrate-N level of 28.7 mg/L was detected in water
samples collected during August 1994 from the household's
well, which had been used since 1990. A nitrate-N level
of 1.2 mg/L was detected in a second well on the
property, approximately 100 feet from the first well;
this well had been the source of the woman's drinking
water during her first four pregnancies. Nitrate-N levels
of <1.5 mg/L were present in water samples in six
other wells located up gradient from the family's well
and within 1 mile of the household. The only nitrate
source identified near the contaminated well was the
family's septic system, which was installed in sandy soil
approximately 70 feet up gradient from the contaminated
well. Although the well probably became contaminated by
effluent from the septic tank, it is unknown when
contamination occurred.
Following these investigations, all four women changed to
nitrate-free sources of drinking water (i.e., bottled or
reverse-osmosis treated). Subsequently, each delivered
one or more full-term, live-born infants.
W Grant, LaGrange County
Health Dept., LaGrange; G Steele, DrPH, State
Epidemiologist, Indiana State Dept of Health: SA Isiorho,
Ph.D. Depth of Geosciences, Indiana-Purdue Univ, Ft. Ft.
Wayne Indiana. Div of Parasitic Diseases National Center
for Infectious Diseases Div of Reproductive Health,
National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health
Promotion; Div of Birth Defects and Developmental
Disabilities and Div of Environmental Hazards and Health
Effects. National Center for Environmental Health, CDC.
The
most widely recognized health problem associated with
ingestion of nitrate-contaminated water is infant
methemoglobinemia and the EPA standard for nitrate in
drinking water of 10 mg/L was established in 1977 to
prevent this condition. Although the findings from
studies of the influence of nitrate on the reproductive
outcomes of laboratory animals and livestock have not
been consistent, some studies have suggested a relation
between nitrate consumption and spontaneous abortions (2,3). Epidemiologic studies of humans
have suggested a possible relation between ingestion of
drinking water containing elevated nitrate levels and an
increased risk for neural tube defects (5,6 ) and, based on the findings of
one study, a possible relation between methemoglobin
levels in women during early pregnancy and subsequent
spontaneous abortions (7 ).
An estimated 13.8 million households in the United States
obtain drinking water from private wells (8). Based on recent studies, the
EPA MCL for nitrates was exceeded by 13.4% of household
wells in nine states in the Midwest (9) and 9% of household wells
nationally (10 ). Because of the risks for
potential adverse health effects, persons who use
drinking water that contains nitrate levels >10mg/L or
other contaminants exceeding the EPA MCL should have
alternative sources of water or appropriate treatment of
existing supplies. information regarding testing of well
water may be obtained from city or county health
departments.
Spontaneous abortions occur commonly, are directly
associated with levels maternal age, and may cluster by
chance. Possible explanations for the cases of
spontaneous abortion investigated by LCHD are that they
may represent an otherwise unrelated cluster or that they
may have been related to ingestion of
nitrate-contaminated drinking water. Term births occurred
before or after the period when each of the four women
consumed contaminated water, and spontaneous abortions
occurred coincident with the period of nitrate exposure.
However, spontaneous abortions frequently are preceded or
followed by live births, and this investigation did not
compare the rate of spontaneous abortions in other
residents of the community who either were or were not
exposed to nitrate-contaminated water. Although this
investigation did not establish a causal link between
spontaneous abortion and nitrate exposure, the findings
indicate the need for further assessment of the possible
effects of this common groundwater contaminant on human
reproduction.
Since 1971, EPA and CDC have maintained a surveillance
system to monitor the occurrence of waterborne disease
outbreaks. Illnesses related to exposures to pathogens
and chemicals associated with recreational water use or
ingestion of drinking water should be reported to the
Epidemiology Branch, Division of Parasitic Diseases,
National Center for Infectious Diseases, CDC, telephone
(770) 488 7760.
1. Kross BC, Ayebo AD, Fuortes LJ. Methemoglobinemia: nitrate toxicity in rural America. Am Fam Phys 1992;46:18>8.
2. Food and Drug Administration. Teratologic evaluation of FDA 71-7 (sodium nitrate). Washington, DC: US Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, Food and Drug Administration, 1972; publication no. PB 221775
3. Sund J. Wright MJ, Simon J. Weeds containing nitrate cause abortion in cattle. Agronomy Journal t 957;49 278-9.
4. Muhrer ME, Garner GB, Pfander WH, et al. The effect of nitrate on reproduction and lactation. J An Sci 1959:15:1291-2.
5. Dorsch MM, Scragg RKR, McMichael AJ, et 31. Congenital malformations and maternal drinking water supply in rural South Australia a case-control study. J Epidemiol 1984;119:473-86.
6. Arbuckle TE, Sherman GJ, Corey PN, et al. Water nitrates and CNS birth defects: a population based case-controlled study Arch Environ Health 1988;43:162-7.
7. Schmitz JT. Methemoglobinemia cause of abortions? Obstet Gynecol 1961:17:413-5.
8. Bureau of the Census. The Housing Survey of the United States, 1993 Washington, DC: use Department of Commerce. E, Economics and Statistics Administration, Bureau of the Census, 1993
9. CDC. Interim report: a survey of the presence of contaminants in water from private wells in nine Midwestern states. Atlanta Georgia: US Department of Health and Human Services. Pubic Health Service, CDC, April 1996.
10. US Geological Survey. Nutrients in ground water and surface water of the United States: an analysis of data through 1992. Reston, Virginia: US Geological Survey, 1995.
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