| Literature DB >> 24792883 |
Brian Gulson1, Karen Mizon2, Alan Taylor3, Michael Korsch4, J Michael Davis5, Honway Louie6, Michael Wu6, Laura Gomez4, Luminita Antin6.
Abstract
We monitored 108 children ≤5 years on a 6-month basis for up to 5 years in a major urban setting. Samples (n ∼ 7000) included blood, urine, handwipes (interior, and after exterior playing), 6-day duplicate diet, drinking water, interior house and day care dust-fall accumulation using petri dishes, exterior dust-fall accumulation, exterior dust sweepings, paint, soil and urban air. The geometric mean blood Pb (PbB) was 2.1 μg/dL and blood Mn (MnB) was 10.0 μg/L. Following a path modelling approach, mixed model analyses for a fully adjusted model showed the strongest associations for PbB were with interior house dust and soil; for MnB there were no significant associations with any predictors. Predictor variables only explained 9% of the variance for Pb and 0.7% for Mn. Relationships between environmental measures and PbB in children are not straightforward; soil and dust sweepings contribute only about 1/5th of the amounts to PbB found in other studies.Entities:
Keywords: Blood; Children; Diet; Dust; Handwipes; Mn; Pathways; Pb; Soil
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24792883 DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2014.04.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Pollut ISSN: 0269-7491 Impact factor: 8.071