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Journal of Environmental Science and Health, Part A
Toxic/Hazardous Substances and Environmental Engineering
Volume 44, 2009 - Issue 12
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ARTICLES

A blood lead benchmark for assessing risks from childhood lead exposure

, , &
Pages 1200-1208 | Received 10 Mar 2009, Published online: 04 Sep 2009
 

Abstract

Lead exposure is an insidious problem, causing subtle effects in children at low exposure levels where clinical signs are not apparent. Although a target blood lead concentration (PbB) of ten micrograms per deciliter (10 μg/dL) has been used as the basis for environmental decision-making in California for nearly two decades, recent epidemiologic evidence suggests a relationship between cognitive deficits and PbB at concentrations < 10 μg/dL. Based on a published meta-analysis of children's IQ scores and their blood lead concentrations, we developed a new blood lead benchmark: an incremental increase in blood lead concentration (ΔPbB) of 1 μg/dL, an increase that we estimate could decrease the IQ score in an average school child in California by up to one point. Although there is no evidence to date for a threshold for the neurobehavioral effects of lead, a one-point IQ decrement was chosen to represent a de minimus change. To safeguard the intellectual potential of all children, additional efforts to reduce or eliminate multiple-source exposures to lead are warranted.

Acknowledgments

Dr. Dowling received partial salary support from a Fulbright Senior Scholar award.

The authors gratefully acknowledge the manuscript reviewers and helpful suggestions of Dr. Richard Hornung and Dr. Herbert Needleman.

Notes

∗Source: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.[ Citation 27 ]

a Slope estimates are the relationship between IQ and concurrent blood lead levels, except Bellinger & Needleman,[ Citation 71 ] used 24-month blood lead levels; Baghurst et al.[ Citation 77 ] used lifetime average blood lead levels; and Wasserman et al.[ Citation 75 ] used lifetime cumulative blood lead levels.

b The pooled analysis by Lanphear et al.[ Citation 31 ] included data from seven individual studies, including Baghurst et al.,[ Citation 77 ] Bellinger et al.,[ Citation 79 ] Canfield et al.,[ Citation 49 ] Dietrich et al.,[ Citation 72 ] and Wasserman et al.[ Citation 75 ]

c In Al-Saleh et al.,[ Citation 76 ] 69% (n = 368) of the children had blood lead levels < 10 μg/dL. The estimated slope for blood lead levels < 10 μg/dL is based on the model for the entire sample population.

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