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Follow-up of Children Overexposed to Lead

The purpose of this study is to assess the nature and magnitude of the deleterious health effects of subclinical over-exposure to lead in children. The study stems from concerns about the impact on the health of children in city slums who ingest leaded paint without overt evidence of poisoning and t...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Albert, R. E., Shore, R. E., Sayers, A. J., Strehlow, C., Kneip, T. J., Pasternack, B. S., Friedhoff, A. J., Covan, F., Cimino, J. A.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1974
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1475148/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/4831145
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author Albert, R. E.
Shore, R. E.
Sayers, A. J.
Strehlow, C.
Kneip, T. J.
Pasternack, B. S.
Friedhoff, A. J.
Covan, F.
Cimino, J. A.
author_facet Albert, R. E.
Shore, R. E.
Sayers, A. J.
Strehlow, C.
Kneip, T. J.
Pasternack, B. S.
Friedhoff, A. J.
Covan, F.
Cimino, J. A.
author_sort Albert, R. E.
collection PubMed
description The purpose of this study is to assess the nature and magnitude of the deleterious health effects of subclinical over-exposure to lead in children. The study stems from concerns about the impact on the health of children in city slums who ingest leaded paint without overt evidence of poisoning and the health implication of rising levels of lead in the environment from automotive emissions. The study sample was derived mainly from a registry of children on whom blood lead determinations had been made by the New York City Department of Health and was supplemented by siblings of the registry cases and children from a lead belt area who had extractions of deciduous teeth in dental clinics. Information was obtained through parental interview, medical records, and psychometric evaluation. The data show that deleterious health effects occur in children who were treated for severe lead poisoning and in children without diagnosed lead poisoning who had elevated blood leads (≥0.06 mg-%). In the absence of diagnosed lead poisoning or elevated blood leads, excess lead exposure, measured in terms of high levels of lead in teeth, was not associated with deleterious health effects.
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spelling pubmed-14751482006-06-09 Follow-up of Children Overexposed to Lead Albert, R. E. Shore, R. E. Sayers, A. J. Strehlow, C. Kneip, T. J. Pasternack, B. S. Friedhoff, A. J. Covan, F. Cimino, J. A. Environ Health Perspect Articles The purpose of this study is to assess the nature and magnitude of the deleterious health effects of subclinical over-exposure to lead in children. The study stems from concerns about the impact on the health of children in city slums who ingest leaded paint without overt evidence of poisoning and the health implication of rising levels of lead in the environment from automotive emissions. The study sample was derived mainly from a registry of children on whom blood lead determinations had been made by the New York City Department of Health and was supplemented by siblings of the registry cases and children from a lead belt area who had extractions of deciduous teeth in dental clinics. Information was obtained through parental interview, medical records, and psychometric evaluation. The data show that deleterious health effects occur in children who were treated for severe lead poisoning and in children without diagnosed lead poisoning who had elevated blood leads (≥0.06 mg-%). In the absence of diagnosed lead poisoning or elevated blood leads, excess lead exposure, measured in terms of high levels of lead in teeth, was not associated with deleterious health effects. 1974-05 /pmc/articles/PMC1475148/ /pubmed/4831145 Text en
spellingShingle Articles
Albert, R. E.
Shore, R. E.
Sayers, A. J.
Strehlow, C.
Kneip, T. J.
Pasternack, B. S.
Friedhoff, A. J.
Covan, F.
Cimino, J. A.
Follow-up of Children Overexposed to Lead
title Follow-up of Children Overexposed to Lead
title_full Follow-up of Children Overexposed to Lead
title_fullStr Follow-up of Children Overexposed to Lead
title_full_unstemmed Follow-up of Children Overexposed to Lead
title_short Follow-up of Children Overexposed to Lead
title_sort follow-up of children overexposed to lead
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1475148/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/4831145
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