Scientific comment on the German human biological monitoring values (HBM values) for mercury.

[1]  C Cox,et al.  Effects of prenatal and postnatal methylmercury exposure from fish consumption on neurodevelopment: outcomes at 66 months of age in the Seychelles Child Development Study. , 1998, JAMA.

[2]  P. Grandjean,et al.  Methylmercury neurotoxicity in Amazonian children downstream from gold mining. , 1999, Environmental health perspectives.

[3]  G Drasch,et al.  The Mt. Diwata study on the Philippines 2000-treatment of mercury intoxicated inhabitants of a gold mining area with DMPS (2,3-dimercapto-1-propane-sulfonic acid, Dimaval). , 2003, The Science of the total environment.

[4]  J. Weiner,et al.  The relationship between mercury concentration in human organs and different predictor variables. , 1993, The Science of the total environment.

[5]  P. Grandjean,et al.  Neurobehavioral effects of intrauterine mercury exposure: potential sources of bias. , 1993, Environmental research.

[6]  G Drasch,et al.  The Mt. Diwata study on the Philippines 1999--assessing mercury intoxication of the population by small scale gold mining. , 2001, The Science of the total environment.

[7]  U. Ewers,et al.  Reference values and human biological monitoring values for environmental toxins , 1999, International archives of occupational and environmental health.

[8]  Boden und Lufthygiene des Umweltbundesamtes Stoffmonographie Quecksilber — Referenz- und Human-Biomonitoring-Werte (HBM) , 1999 .

[9]  Roberta F. White,et al.  Cognitive deficit in 7-year-old children with prenatal exposure to methylmercury. , 1997, Neurotoxicology and teratology.

[10]  D. Sanfilippo,et al.  Elemental mercury poisoning. , 1991, Clinical pharmacy.