News Release

Organophosphate exposure and brain activation

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

In a functional neuroimaging analysis of 95 adolescents from a longitudinal cohort study in California, prenatal exposure to organophosphate (OP) pesticides was associated with reduced activation in various brain regions during a cognitive test as well as sex-dependent associations between prenatal OP exposure and brain activation during a language comprehension test, suggesting a neural basis for previously reported associations between OP exposure and neurobehavioral outcomes.

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Article #19-03940: "Prenatal exposure to organophosphate pesticides and functional neuroimaging in adolescents living in proximity to pesticide application," by Sharon K. Sagiv et al.

MEDIA CONTACT: Sharon K. Sagiv, University of California, Berkeley, CA; tel: 510-642-8917, 919-260-6339; e-mail: sagiv@berkeley.edu; Brenda Eskenazi, UC Berkeley School of Public Health, CA; tel: 510-642-3496, 510-517-2831; e-mail: eskenazi@berkeley.edu


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