ABSTRACT
OBJECTIVE: To inform of a new teratogenic syndrome in human beings and its confirmation in rats. MATERIAL AND METHODS: The study comprised three phases: a field study; a case-control study; and a genetic epidemiology study, aiming at identifying the causes of the occurrence of congenital malformations and psychomotor retardation in the city of Matamoros, Tamaulipas. The second-phase clinical multidisciplinary study was carried out at a general hospital, to conduct a comprehensive evaluation of patients identified during the first phase and offer them the necessary treatment. The third-phase experimental study was done in rats in order to confirm the teratogenic effect of the agents detected in the first phase. RESULTS: A total of 44 patients had a peculiar phenotype and mental retardation of varying degrees, all children of ex-workers of the same factory who were in direct contact, without protection, with organic solvents (methyl cellosolve and ethylene glycol). In the clinical study a syndrome was delineated, previously unreported, consisting of a peculiar facies, mental retardation, and musculo-skeletal and sensorial abnormalities. In the experimental study it was demonstrated that both methyl cellosolve and ethylene glycol cause cranio-facial, musculo-skeletal and central nervous system abnormalities, which confirmed the teratogenic effect of these solvents. CONCLUSIONS: The results of this study establish the existence of a new teratogenic syndrome in humans, produced by methyl cellosolve and ethylene glycol, whose teratogenic capacity had not been reported previously.