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The future challenge of lead toxicity.

Five decades ago, lead toxicity in childhood was thought in nonlethal cases to be without residual effect. This misconception was corrected in 1943 by Randolph Byers, who began the modern era of lead neurotoxicology by asserting that lead not only killed cells, but interfered with the normal develop...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Needleman, H L
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1990
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1567807/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2088760
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author Needleman, H L
author_facet Needleman, H L
author_sort Needleman, H L
collection PubMed
description Five decades ago, lead toxicity in childhood was thought in nonlethal cases to be without residual effect. This misconception was corrected in 1943 by Randolph Byers, who began the modern era of lead neurotoxicology by asserting that lead not only killed cells, but interfered with the normal development of central nervous system neurons. The human data from Byers forward is reviewed, with particular attention on methodological issues that have emerged. The papers on human neurotoxicology presented at the NIEHS lead conference held in Research Triangle Park, NC, in 1974 are examined to demonstrate the progress made over the last 15 years. Seven methodological solecisms have clouded judgment over the question of lead toxicity at low dose: worship of the sacrament of p = 0.05; inaccurate causal modeling; drawing conclusions from studies with inadequate power; positing phantom covariates; underestimating the importance of "small" effects; demanding proof of causality; and evaluating studies in isolation. The principles behind these errors are discussed. Lead exposure is associated with hyperactivity, and hyperactivity is a risk factor for antisocial behavior. The relationship between lead exposure and antisocial behavior is estimated. A plan for the effective removal of one major lead source, housing stock, is presented.
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spelling pubmed-15678072006-09-18 The future challenge of lead toxicity. Needleman, H L Environ Health Perspect Research Article Five decades ago, lead toxicity in childhood was thought in nonlethal cases to be without residual effect. This misconception was corrected in 1943 by Randolph Byers, who began the modern era of lead neurotoxicology by asserting that lead not only killed cells, but interfered with the normal development of central nervous system neurons. The human data from Byers forward is reviewed, with particular attention on methodological issues that have emerged. The papers on human neurotoxicology presented at the NIEHS lead conference held in Research Triangle Park, NC, in 1974 are examined to demonstrate the progress made over the last 15 years. Seven methodological solecisms have clouded judgment over the question of lead toxicity at low dose: worship of the sacrament of p = 0.05; inaccurate causal modeling; drawing conclusions from studies with inadequate power; positing phantom covariates; underestimating the importance of "small" effects; demanding proof of causality; and evaluating studies in isolation. The principles behind these errors are discussed. Lead exposure is associated with hyperactivity, and hyperactivity is a risk factor for antisocial behavior. The relationship between lead exposure and antisocial behavior is estimated. A plan for the effective removal of one major lead source, housing stock, is presented. 1990-11 /pmc/articles/PMC1567807/ /pubmed/2088760 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Needleman, H L
The future challenge of lead toxicity.
title The future challenge of lead toxicity.
title_full The future challenge of lead toxicity.
title_fullStr The future challenge of lead toxicity.
title_full_unstemmed The future challenge of lead toxicity.
title_short The future challenge of lead toxicity.
title_sort future challenge of lead toxicity.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1567807/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2088760
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