Science Inventory

Developmental Toxicology##

Citation:

Rogers, J. Developmental Toxicology##. Edition 8, Chapter 10, C. D. Klassen (ed.), Toxicology. McGraw-Hill Companies, New York, NY, 1:481-529, (2014).

Impact/Purpose:

This is a review of the effects of environmental exposures during development on risk of adult disease.

Description:

Developmental toxicology encompasses the study of developmental exposures, pharmacokinetics, mechanisms, pathogenesis, and outcomes potentially leading to adverse health effects. Manifestations of developmental toxicity include structural malformations, growth retardation, functional or metabolic impairment, and/or death of the organism. Developmental exposures may also alter the risk of diseases in adulthood. Developmental toxicology defined as such is a relatively new science, but teratology, the study of structural birth defects, as a descriptive science preceded written language. For example, a marble sculpture from southern Turkey dating to 6500 B.C. depicts conjoined twins (Warkany, 1983), and Egyptian wall paintings of human conditions such as cleft palate and achondroplasia date to as long as 5000 years ago. Conjecture has it that mythological figures such as the Cyclops and sirens took their origin in the birth of malformed infants (Thompson, 1930; Warkany, 1977). Ancient Babylonians, Greeks, and Romans believed that abnormal infants were reflections of celestial events and were considered to be portents of the future. Indeed, the Latin word monstrum, from monstrare (to show) or monere (to warn), connotes an ability to foretell the future. In turn, derivation of the word teratology is from the Greek word for monster, teras. Hippocrates and Aristotle thought that abnormal development could originate in physical causes such as uterine trauma or pressure, but Aristotle also held a widespread belief that maternal impressions and emotions could influence the development of the child. He advised pregnant women to gaze at beautiful statuary to increase their child’s beauty. Though this theory sounds fanciful, it is present in diverse cultures throughout recorded history. Indeed, we now know that maternal stress, depression and anxiety during pregnancy can be deleterious to the developing conceptus and child (Dunkel Schetter and Tanner, 2012).

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( BOOK CHAPTER)
Product Published Date:05/31/2014
Record Last Revised:07/28/2014
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 275758