Investigator

Hira Choudhury

Lecturer · International Medical University, School of Pharmacy

HCHira Choudhury
Papers(1)
Environmental and occ…
Collaborators(4)
Pallav SenguptaShubhadeep Roychoudhu…Sulagna DuttaBapi Gorain
Institutions(4)
Imu UniversityGulf Medical Universi…Assam UniversityBirla Institute of Te…

Papers

Environmental and occupational exposure of metals and female reproductive health

Untainted environment promotes health, but the last few decades experienced steep upsurge in environmental contaminants posing detrimental physiological impact. The responsible factors mainly include the exponential growth of human population, havoc rise in industrialization, poorly planned urbanization, and slapdash environment management. Environmental degradation can increase the likelihood of human exposure to heavy metals, resulting in health consequences such as reproductive problems. As a result, research into metal-induced causes of reproductive impairment at the genetic, epigenetic, and biochemical levels must be strengthened further. These metals impact upon the female reproduction at all strata of its regulation and functions, be it development, maturation, or endocrine functions, and are linked to an increase in the causes of infertility in women. Chronic exposures to the heavy metals may lead to breast cancer, endometriosis, endometrial cancer, menstrual disorders, and spontaneous abortions, as well as pre-term deliveries, stillbirths. For example, endometriosis, endometrial cancer, and spontaneous abortions are all caused by the metalloestrogen cadmium (Cd); lead (Pb) levels over a certain threshold can cause spontaneous abortion and have a teratogenic impact; toxic amounts of mercury (Hg) have an influence on the menstrual cycle, which can lead to infertility. Impact of environmental exposure to heavy metals on female fertility is therefore a well-known fact. Thus, the underlying mechanisms must be explained and periodically updated, given the growing evidence on the influence of increasing environmental heavy metal load on female fertility. The purpose of this review is to give a concise overview of how heavy metal affects female reproductive health.

1Papers
4Collaborators
Endometrial NeoplasmsEndometriosisBrain NeoplasmsTranscytosis

Positions

2015–

Lecturer

International Medical University · School of Pharmacy

2014–

Assistant Professor

Sinhgad Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences · Department of Pharmacy

2004–

Associate Scientist

Dr Reddy's Laboratories Ltd · Drug Metabolism Pharmacokinetics

Education

2014

PhD

Jadavpur University · Pharmaceutical Technology

Links & IDs
0000-0002-8723-981X

Researcher Id: N-3127-2018