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Water Contaminants

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Water Contaminants Overview - Tiny Sips, Big Risks

  • Sources: Industrial (heavy metals), agricultural (pesticides, nitrates), natural (arsenic, fluoride), aging infrastructure (lead, copper).
  • Pediatric vulnerability: Higher intake per body weight, rapidly developing organ systems, immature detoxification, increased gut absorption.
  • Key health impacts: Neurodevelopmental delays, GI illnesses, renal damage, endocrine disruption.

⭐ Even low levels of lead exposure from water can cause significant, irreversible neurodevelopmental deficits in young children.

Heavy Metals in Water - Poisonous Potions

⭐ Basophilic stippling of RBCs is a characteristic, though not pathognomonic, finding in lead poisoning.

ContaminantKey Sources in WaterMajor Pediatric Health EffectsDiagnostic CluesCritical LevelsBrief Mgmt/Prevention
Lead (Pb)Old pipes, paint, traditional medicines.Neurodevelopmental deficits (↓IQ), anemia, colic. 📌LEAD: Lead lines, Encephalopathy, Anemia, Drops, Abdominal colic.Basophilic stippling, ↑FEP.BLL > 5 µg/dL (action); chelate > 45 µg/dL.Source removal, chelation (Succimer, EDTA).
Arsenic (As)Contaminated groundwater, pesticides.Skin lesions (keratosis, pigmentation), neuropathy, cancer risk.Mee's lines (nails), garlic breath (acute).WHO: Water < 10 µg/L.Safe water, chelation (DMPS, DMSA) if severe.
Mercury (Hg)Contaminated fish (methyl-Hg), dental amalgams.(Methyl-Hg) Neurotoxicity; Acrodynia (Pink Disease).↑Hg (blood/urine); acrodynia symptoms.Blood Hg < 5 µg/L.Avoid high-Hg fish, chelation (DMSA).

Nitrates & Fluoride - Well Water Warnings

  • Nitrates
    • Sources: Well water (fertilizers, sewage contamination).
    • Mechanism: Gut bacteria convert $NO_3^-$ to $NO_2^-$; $NO_2^-$ oxidizes $HbFe^{2+}$ (hemoglobin) to $HbFe^{3+}$ (methemoglobin) $\rightarrow$ $\downarrow O_2$ carrying capacity. 📌 Nitrates: "Baby BLUE due to Fe THREE ($Fe^{3+}$)".
    • Clinical: "Blue baby syndrome" (cyanosis, esp. infants <6 months), dyspnea, tachycardia.
    • Threshold: > 10 ppm (as N) or > 45 ppm (as $NO_3^-$) in water.
    • Management: Methylene blue (IV).
  • Fluoride
    • Sources: Naturally in well water, excess toothpaste ingestion.
    • Optimal level: 0.7 ppm in drinking water for caries prevention.
    • Dental Fluorosis: Mottling, chalky white/brown staining of enamel (chronic exposure > 1.5-2 ppm).
    • Skeletal Fluorosis: Bone pain, stiffness, deformities (chronic high exposure, e.g., > 4 ppm).
    • Prevention: Test well water, use alternative safe water sources, supervised tooth brushing with pea-sized amount of fluoride toothpaste.

⭐ Dental fluorosis is the earliest and most common visible sign of excessive fluoride intake.

Microbiological Contaminants - Invisible Invaders

Key waterborne pathogens causing significant pediatric illness. Early identification and prevention are crucial.

Pathogen TypeExamplesKey DiseasesPrevention Focus
BacteriaE. coli, V. cholerae, ShigellaDiarrhea, Dysentery, CholeraWASH (Water, Sanitation, Hygiene)
VirusesHepatitis A/E, RotavirusJaundice, Viral gastroenteritisVaccination, Hygiene
ProtozoaGiardia, Cryptosporidium, E. histolyticaPersistent diarrhea, DysenteryWater treatment, Hygiene

Other Contaminants & Prevention - Pure Water Playbook

  • Key Contaminants:
    • Pesticides (Organophosphates, Organochlorines): Neurodevelopmental effects.
    • Disinfection Byproducts (DBPs, e.g., Trihalomethanes $CHX_3$): Potential long-term risks.
  • Prevention - Pure Water Playbook:
    • Source Protection: Watershed management.
    • Municipal Treatment: Filtration, disinfection.
    • Household Treatment: Boiling, filters, SODIS, chlorination (details in flowchart).
    • Safe Storage: Clean, covered containers. Household water treatment methods comparison

⭐ SODIS (Solar Water Disinfection) using clear PET bottles requires approx. 6 hours of bright sunlight to make water microbiologically safe.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Lead in water: causes irreversible neurodevelopmental damage, anemia, and abdominal colic in children.
  • Excess fluoride: leads to dental fluorosis (mottling), skeletal fluorosis; optimal levels prevent dental caries.
  • Nitrates: cause methemoglobinemia ("blue baby syndrome") in infants <6 months due to bacterial conversion.
  • Chronic arsenic exposure: linked to skin lesions (keratosis, pigmentation), cancers, and peripheral neuropathy.
  • Mercury (methylmercury): highly neurotoxic to developing brain, bioaccumulates in fish.
  • Pesticides (organophosphates): contaminate water, leading to acute cholinergic crisis (SLUDGE).

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Practice Questions: Water Contaminants

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A child with fever with abdominal cramps & pus in stools, causative organism is ?

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Encephalopathy due to _____ poisoning typically occurs in toddlers aged 15 to 30 months old

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Encephalopathy due to _____ poisoning typically occurs in toddlers aged 15 to 30 months old

lead

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