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Impact of diet on lead in blood and urine in female adults and relevance to mobilization of lead from bone stores.

We measured high precision lead isotope ratios and lead concentrations in blood, urine, and environmental samples to assess the significance of diet as a contributing factor to blood and urine lead levels in a cohort of 23 migrant women and 5 Australian-born women. We evaluated possible correlations...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Gulson, B L, Mahaffey, K R, Jameson, C W, Patison, N, Law, A J, Mizon, K J, Korsch, M J, Pederson, D
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1999
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1566515/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10090703
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author Gulson, B L
Mahaffey, K R
Jameson, C W
Patison, N
Law, A J
Mizon, K J
Korsch, M J
Pederson, D
author_facet Gulson, B L
Mahaffey, K R
Jameson, C W
Patison, N
Law, A J
Mizon, K J
Korsch, M J
Pederson, D
author_sort Gulson, B L
collection PubMed
description We measured high precision lead isotope ratios and lead concentrations in blood, urine, and environmental samples to assess the significance of diet as a contributing factor to blood and urine lead levels in a cohort of 23 migrant women and 5 Australian-born women. We evaluated possible correlations between levels of dietary lead intake and changes observed in blood and urine lead levels and isotopic composition during pregnancy and postpartum. Mean blood lead concentrations for both groups were approximately 3 microg/dl. The concentration of lead in the diet was 5.8 +/- 3 microg Pb/kg [geometric mean (GM) 5.2] and mean daily dietary intake was 8.5 microg/kg/day (GM 7.4), with a range of 2-39 microg/kg/day. Analysis of 6-day duplicate dietary samples for individual subjects commonly showed major spikes in lead concentration and isotopic composition that were not reflected by associated changes in either blood lead concentration or isotopic composition. Changes in blood lead levels and isotopic composition observed during and after pregnancy could not be solely explained by dietary lead. These data are consistent with earlier conclusions that, in cases where levels of environmental lead exposure and dietary lead intake are low, skeletal contribution is the dominant contributor to blood lead, especially during pregnancy and postpartum.
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spelling pubmed-15665152006-09-19 Impact of diet on lead in blood and urine in female adults and relevance to mobilization of lead from bone stores. Gulson, B L Mahaffey, K R Jameson, C W Patison, N Law, A J Mizon, K J Korsch, M J Pederson, D Environ Health Perspect Research Article We measured high precision lead isotope ratios and lead concentrations in blood, urine, and environmental samples to assess the significance of diet as a contributing factor to blood and urine lead levels in a cohort of 23 migrant women and 5 Australian-born women. We evaluated possible correlations between levels of dietary lead intake and changes observed in blood and urine lead levels and isotopic composition during pregnancy and postpartum. Mean blood lead concentrations for both groups were approximately 3 microg/dl. The concentration of lead in the diet was 5.8 +/- 3 microg Pb/kg [geometric mean (GM) 5.2] and mean daily dietary intake was 8.5 microg/kg/day (GM 7.4), with a range of 2-39 microg/kg/day. Analysis of 6-day duplicate dietary samples for individual subjects commonly showed major spikes in lead concentration and isotopic composition that were not reflected by associated changes in either blood lead concentration or isotopic composition. Changes in blood lead levels and isotopic composition observed during and after pregnancy could not be solely explained by dietary lead. These data are consistent with earlier conclusions that, in cases where levels of environmental lead exposure and dietary lead intake are low, skeletal contribution is the dominant contributor to blood lead, especially during pregnancy and postpartum. 1999-04 /pmc/articles/PMC1566515/ /pubmed/10090703 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Gulson, B L
Mahaffey, K R
Jameson, C W
Patison, N
Law, A J
Mizon, K J
Korsch, M J
Pederson, D
Impact of diet on lead in blood and urine in female adults and relevance to mobilization of lead from bone stores.
title Impact of diet on lead in blood and urine in female adults and relevance to mobilization of lead from bone stores.
title_full Impact of diet on lead in blood and urine in female adults and relevance to mobilization of lead from bone stores.
title_fullStr Impact of diet on lead in blood and urine in female adults and relevance to mobilization of lead from bone stores.
title_full_unstemmed Impact of diet on lead in blood and urine in female adults and relevance to mobilization of lead from bone stores.
title_short Impact of diet on lead in blood and urine in female adults and relevance to mobilization of lead from bone stores.
title_sort impact of diet on lead in blood and urine in female adults and relevance to mobilization of lead from bone stores.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1566515/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10090703
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