4.7 Article

Case-Control Study of Nodding Syndrome in Acholiland: Urinary Multi-Mycotoxin Screening

Journal

TOXINS
Volume 13, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/toxins13050313

Keywords

Nodding Syndrome; mycotoxins; urine; Uganda

Funding

  1. U.S. National Institutes of Health [R01 NS079276, R21 TW009927, R21 NS108355]

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This study revealed that children, regardless of whether they have NS or not, currently carry foodborne mycotoxins, including those associated with moldy maize, in this community.
This case-control study adds to the growing body of knowledge on the medical, nutritional, and environmental factors associated with Nodding Syndrome (NS), a seizure disorder of children and adolescents in northern Uganda. Past research described a significant association between NS and prior history of measles infection, dependence on emergency food and, at head nodding onset, subsistence on moldy maize, which has the potential to harbor mycotoxins. We used LC-MS/MS to screen for current mycotoxin loads by evaluating nine analytes in urine samples from age-and-gender matched NS cases (n = 50) and Community Controls (CC, n = 50). The presence of the three mycotoxins identified in the screening was not significantly different between the two groups, so samples were combined to generate an overall view of exposure in this community during the study. Compared against subsequently run standards, alpha-zearalenol (43 +/- 103 mu g/L in 15 samples > limit of quantitation (LOQ); 0 (0/359) mu g/L), T-2 toxin (39 +/- 81 mu g/L in 72 samples > LOQ; 0 (0/425) mu g/L) and aflatoxin M1 (4 +/- 10 mu g/L in 15 samples > LOQ; 0 (0/45) mu g/L) were detected and calculated as the average concentration +/- SD; median (min/max). Ninety-five percent of the samples had at least one urinary mycotoxin; 87% were positive for two of the three compounds detected. While mycotoxin loads at NS onset years ago are and will remain unknown, this study showed that children with and without NS currently harbor foodborne mycotoxins, including those associated with maize.

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