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      Recommendations for Medical Management of Adult Lead Exposure

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          Abstract

          Research conducted in recent years has increased public health concern about the toxicity of lead at low dose and has supported a reappraisal of the levels of lead exposure that may be safely tolerated in the workplace. In this article, which appears as part of a mini-monograph on adult lead exposure, we summarize a body of published literature that establishes the potential for hypertension, effects on renal function, cognitive dysfunction, and adverse female reproductive outcome in adults with whole-blood lead concentrations < 40 μg/dL. Based on this literature, and our collective experience in evaluating lead-exposed adults, we recommend that individuals be removed from occupational lead exposure if a single blood lead concentration exceeds 30 μg/dL or if two successive blood lead concentrations measured over a 4-week interval are ≥ 20 μg/dL. Removal of individuals from lead exposure should be considered to avoid long-term risk to health if exposure control measures over an extended period do not decrease blood lead concentrations to < 10 μg/dL or if selected medical conditions exist that would increase the risk of continued exposure. Recommended medical surveillance for all lead-exposed workers should include quarterly blood lead measurements for individuals with blood lead concentrations between 10 and 19 μg/dL, and semiannual blood lead measurements when sustained blood lead concentrations are < 10 μg/dL. It is advisable for pregnant women to avoid occupational or avocational lead exposure that would result in blood lead concentrations > 5 μg/dL. Chelation may have an adjunctive role in the medical management of highly exposed adults with symptomatic lead intoxication but is not recommended for asymptomatic individuals with low blood lead concentrations.

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          Lead Exposure and Cardiovascular Disease—A Systematic Review

          Objective This systematic review evaluates the evidence on the association between lead exposure and cardiovascular end points in human populations. Methods We reviewed all observational studies from database searches and citations regarding lead and cardiovascular end points. Results A positive association of lead exposure with blood pressure has been identified in numerous studies in different settings, including prospective studies and in relatively homogeneous socioeconomic status groups. Several studies have identified a dose–response relationship. Although the magnitude of this association is modest, it may be underestimated by measurement error. The hypertensive effects of lead have been confirmed in experimental models. Beyond hypertension, studies in general populations have identified a positive association of lead exposure with clinical cardiovascular outcomes (cardiovascular, coronary heart disease, and stroke mortality; and peripheral arterial disease), but the number of studies is small. In some studies these associations were observed at blood lead levels < 5 μg/dL. Conclusions We conclude that the evidence is sufficient to infer a causal relationship of lead exposure with hypertension. We conclude that the evidence is suggestive but not sufficient to infer a causal relationship of lead exposure with clinical cardiovascular outcomes. There is also suggestive but insufficient evidence to infer a causal relationship of lead exposure with heart rate variability. Public Health Implications These findings have immediate public health implications. Current occupational safety standards for blood lead must be lowered and a criterion for screening elevated lead exposure needs to be established in adults. Risk assessment and economic analyses of lead exposure impact must include the cardiovascular effects of lead. Finally, regulatory and public health interventions must be developed and implemented to further prevent and reduce lead exposure.
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            Blood lead below 0.48 micromol/L (10 microg/dL) and mortality among US adults.

            Blood lead levels above 0.48 micromol/L (10 microg/dL) in adults have been associated with increased risk of cardiovascular, cancer, and all-cause mortality. The objective of the present study was to determine the association between blood lead levels below 0.48 micromol/L and mortality in the general US population. Blood lead levels were measured in a nationally representative sample of 13,946 adult participants of the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey recruited in 1988 to 1994 and followed up for up to 12 years for all-cause and cause-specific mortality. The geometric mean blood lead level in study participants was 0.12 micromol/L (2.58 microg/dL). After multivariate adjustment, the hazard ratios (95% CI) for comparisons of participants in the highest tertile of blood lead (> or = 0.17 micromol/L [> or = 3.62 microg/dL]) with those in the lowest tertile ( 0.10 micromol/L (> or = 2 microg/dL). There was no association between blood lead and cancer mortality in this range of exposure. The association between blood lead levels and increased all-cause and cardiovascular mortality was observed at substantially lower blood lead levels than previously reported. Despite the marked decrease in blood lead levels over the past 3 decades, environmental lead exposures remain a significant determinant of cardiovascular mortality in the general population, constituting a major public health problem.
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              Fetal Lead Exposure at Each Stage of Pregnancy as a Predictor of Infant Mental Development

              Background The impact of prenatal lead exposure on neurodevelopment remains unclear in terms of consistency, the trimester of greatest vulnerability, and the best method for estimating fetal lead exposure. Objective We studied prenatal lead exposure’s impact on neurodevelopment using repeated measures of fetal dose as reflected by maternal whole blood and plasma lead levels. Methods We measured lead in maternal plasma and whole blood during each trimester in 146 pregnant women in Mexico City. We then measured umbilical cord blood lead at delivery and, when offspring were 12 and 24 months of age, measured blood lead and administered the Bayley Scales of Infant Development. We used multivariate regression, adjusting for covariates and 24-month blood lead, to compare the impacts of our pregnancy measures of fetal lead dose. Results Maternal lead levels were moderately high with a first-trimester blood lead mean (± SD) value of 7.1 ± 5.1 μg/dL and 14% of values ≥10 μg/dL. Both maternal plasma and whole blood lead during the first trimester (but not in the second or third trimester) were significant predictors (p < 0.05) of poorer Mental Development Index (MDI) scores. In models combining all three trimester measures and using standardized coefficients, the effect of first-trimester maternal plasma lead was somewhat greater than the effect of first-trimester maternal whole blood lead and substantially greater than the effects of second- or third-trimester plasma lead, and values averaged over all three trimesters. A 1-SD change in first-trimester plasma lead was associated with a reduction in MDI score of 3.5 points. Postnatal blood lead levels in the offspring were less strongly correlated with MDI scores. Conclusions Fetal lead exposure has an adverse effect on neurodevelopment, with an effect that may be most pronounced during the first trimester and best captured by measuring lead in either maternal plasma or whole blood.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Environ Health Perspect
                Environmental Health Perspectives
                National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
                0091-6765
                March 2007
                22 December 2006
                : 115
                : 3
                : 463-471
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Division of Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology, Department of Medicine, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, Colorado, USA
                [2 ] Department of Veterans Affairs, New Jersey Health Care System, East Orange, New Jersey, USA
                [3 ] CINVESTAV-IPN (Centro de Investigaciones y de Estudios Avanzados-Instituto Politécnico Nacional), Merida, Yucatan, Mexico
                [4 ] National Institute of Public Health, Cuernavaca, Morelos, Mexico
                [5 ] Public Health Institute, Occupational Lead Poisoning Prevention Program, Richmond, California, USA
                [6 ] California Department of Health Services, Occupational Health Branch, Richmond, California, USA
                [7 ] Departments of Environmental Health Sciences and Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, USA
                [8 ] Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA
                [9 ] Department of Environmental Health Sciences, University of Michigan School of Public Health, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
                [10 ] Program in Environmental Health, Division of General Pediatrics, Children’s Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
                Author notes
                Address correspondence to M. Kosnett, 1630 Welton St., Ste. 300, Denver, CO 80202 USA. Telephone: (303) 571-5778. Fax: (303) 571-5820. E-mail: Michael.Kosnett@ 123456uchsc.edu

                MJK is an independent consultant who has provided paid consultation to community groups, industrial corporations, and governmental agencies regarding the health effects of occupational and environmental exposure to lead. He received no funding from any party for his contributions to this manuscript. B.L.M. and K.L.H. are affiliated with the Occupational Health Branch, California Department of Health Services (CDHS).

                Article
                ehp0115-000463
                10.1289/ehp.9784
                1849937
                17431500
                d998b60f-4dee-4933-b532-bacf799f69db
                This is an Open Access article: verbatim copying and redistribution of this article are permitted in all media for any purpose, provided this notice is preserved along with the article's original DOI
                History
                : 3 October 2006
                : 21 December 2006
                Categories
                Research
                Mini-Monograph

                Public health
                pregnancy,medical surveillance,chelation,adult lead exposure,blood lead,medical management

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