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Follow-up screening of lead-poisoned children near an auto battery recycling plant, Haina, Dominican Republic.
In August 1997 we performed a follow-up survey of 146 lead-poisoned children from a community near a previously active auto battery recycling smelter in Haina near Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. Our follow-up survey confirmed a severe incidence of elevated blood lead (BPb) and erythrocyte protop...
Autores principales: | , , , |
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Formato: | Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
1999
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Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1566703/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10544160 |
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author | Kaul, B Sandhu, R S Depratt, C Reyes, F |
author_facet | Kaul, B Sandhu, R S Depratt, C Reyes, F |
author_sort | Kaul, B |
collection | PubMed |
description | In August 1997 we performed a follow-up survey of 146 lead-poisoned children from a community near a previously active auto battery recycling smelter in Haina near Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. Our follow-up survey confirmed a severe incidence of elevated blood lead (BPb) and erythrocyte protoporphyrin/zinc protoporphyrin (EP-ZnPP) levels. The mean BPb level was 32 micrograms/dL and the mean EP-ZnPP level was 128 micrograms/dL. The frequency distribution of BPb showed that only 9% of the children had BPb levels below the currently acceptable 10 micrograms/dL threshold level, 23% had between 10 and 19 micrograms/dL, 40% had between 20 and 39 micrograms/dL, 27% had between 40 and 99 micrograms/dL, and the remainder had > 100 micrograms/dL. These findings are significantly greater than the mean BPb and EP-ZnPP levels of 14 and 35 micrograms/dL, respectively, in a comparison group of 63 children in Barsequillo, 4 miles away. BPb frequency distributions for these groups were < 10 micrograms/dL (42%), 10-19 micrograms/dL (32%), and 20-39 micrograms/dL (16%); in the remaining 10%, BPb levels were between 40 and 99 micrograms/dL. Similarly, the corresponding frequency distribution of EP-ZnPP levels in Haina children were proportional to the severity of lead poisoning and significantly higher than those of the Barsequillo comparison group. This study reveals that at least 28% of Haina children require immediate treatment; of these, 5% with lead levels > 70 micrograms/dL are also at risk for severe neurologic sequelae, and urgent action is imperative. |
format | Text |
id | pubmed-1566703 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 1999 |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-15667032006-09-19 Follow-up screening of lead-poisoned children near an auto battery recycling plant, Haina, Dominican Republic. Kaul, B Sandhu, R S Depratt, C Reyes, F Environ Health Perspect Research Article In August 1997 we performed a follow-up survey of 146 lead-poisoned children from a community near a previously active auto battery recycling smelter in Haina near Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. Our follow-up survey confirmed a severe incidence of elevated blood lead (BPb) and erythrocyte protoporphyrin/zinc protoporphyrin (EP-ZnPP) levels. The mean BPb level was 32 micrograms/dL and the mean EP-ZnPP level was 128 micrograms/dL. The frequency distribution of BPb showed that only 9% of the children had BPb levels below the currently acceptable 10 micrograms/dL threshold level, 23% had between 10 and 19 micrograms/dL, 40% had between 20 and 39 micrograms/dL, 27% had between 40 and 99 micrograms/dL, and the remainder had > 100 micrograms/dL. These findings are significantly greater than the mean BPb and EP-ZnPP levels of 14 and 35 micrograms/dL, respectively, in a comparison group of 63 children in Barsequillo, 4 miles away. BPb frequency distributions for these groups were < 10 micrograms/dL (42%), 10-19 micrograms/dL (32%), and 20-39 micrograms/dL (16%); in the remaining 10%, BPb levels were between 40 and 99 micrograms/dL. Similarly, the corresponding frequency distribution of EP-ZnPP levels in Haina children were proportional to the severity of lead poisoning and significantly higher than those of the Barsequillo comparison group. This study reveals that at least 28% of Haina children require immediate treatment; of these, 5% with lead levels > 70 micrograms/dL are also at risk for severe neurologic sequelae, and urgent action is imperative. 1999-11 /pmc/articles/PMC1566703/ /pubmed/10544160 Text en |
spellingShingle | Research Article Kaul, B Sandhu, R S Depratt, C Reyes, F Follow-up screening of lead-poisoned children near an auto battery recycling plant, Haina, Dominican Republic. |
title | Follow-up screening of lead-poisoned children near an auto battery recycling plant, Haina, Dominican Republic. |
title_full | Follow-up screening of lead-poisoned children near an auto battery recycling plant, Haina, Dominican Republic. |
title_fullStr | Follow-up screening of lead-poisoned children near an auto battery recycling plant, Haina, Dominican Republic. |
title_full_unstemmed | Follow-up screening of lead-poisoned children near an auto battery recycling plant, Haina, Dominican Republic. |
title_short | Follow-up screening of lead-poisoned children near an auto battery recycling plant, Haina, Dominican Republic. |
title_sort | follow-up screening of lead-poisoned children near an auto battery recycling plant, haina, dominican republic. |
topic | Research Article |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1566703/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10544160 |
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