| Literature DB >> 27240393 |
Feng Zhang1, Yang Liu2, Hengdong Zhang3, Yonghong Ban4, Jianfeng Wang5, Jian Liu6, Lixing Zhong7, Xianwen Chen8, Baoli Zhu9.
Abstract
Lead pollution incidents have occurred frequently in mainland China, which has caused many lead poisoning incidents. This paper took a battery recycling factory as the subject, and focused on measuring the blood lead levels of environmental samples and all the children living around the factory, and analyzed the relationship between them. We collected blood samples from the surrounding residential area, as well as soil, water, vegetables. The atomic absorption method was applied to measure the lead content in these samples. The basic information of the generation procedure, operation type, habit and personal protect equipment was collected by an occupational hygiene investigation. Blood lead levels in 43.12% of the subjects exceeded 100 μg/L. The 50th and the 95th percentiles were 89 μg/L and 232 μg/L for blood lead levels in children, respectively, and the geometric mean was 94 μg/L. Children were stratified into groups by age, gender, parents' occupation, distance and direction from the recycling plant. The difference of blood lead levels between groups was significant (p < 0.05). Four risk factors for elevated blood lead levels were found by logistic regression analysis, including younger age, male, shorter distance from the recycling plant, and parents with at least one working in the recycling plant. The rate of excess lead concentration in water was 6.25%, 6.06% in soil and 44.44% in leaf vegetables, which were all higher than the Chinese environment standards. The shorter the distance to the factory, the higher the value of BLL and lead levels in vegetable and environment samples. The lead level in the environmental samples was higher downwind of the recycling plant.Entities:
Keywords: blood lead level; children; lead battery recycling plan
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Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27240393 PMCID: PMC4923998 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph13060541
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Map of lead battery recycling plant under investigation and sampling sites.
Quality Assurance for Lead in Samples. The Reference Material (RM) results.
| Name of RM | Certified | Measured |
|---|---|---|
| Lead in ox blood | ||
| Level I (μg/L) | 96 ± 8 | 94.52 ± 3.57 μg/L ( |
| Level II (μg/L) | 189 ± 10 | 185 ± 4.79 μg/L ( |
| Lead in vegetable (laver) ug/g | 0.81 ± 0.03 | 0.79 ± 0.04 ug/g ( |
| Lead in soil (mg/kg) | 47.4 ± 3.5 | 46.92 ± 2.18 mg/kg ( |
| Lead in water (ug/mL) | 2.0 ± 0.12 | 1.98 ± 0.09 ug/ML ( |
Methodology parameters.
| Matrix | LOD | Level | Measured | Recovery (%) | RSD% |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Blood (μg/L) | 0.45 | 5 | 4.87 ± 0.42 ( | 97.4 | 4.5 |
| 50 | 49.17 ± 1.58 ( | 98.3 | 3.2 | ||
| 150 | 151.09 ± 10.21 ( | 100.7 | 6.8 | ||
| Vegetable (laver) (μg/kg) | 5.0 | 50 | 48.26 ± 2.13 ( | 96.5 | 4.4 |
| 200 | 197.84 ± 10.94 ( | 98.9 | 5.5 | ||
| 500 | 503.21 ± 19.01 ( | 100.6 | 3.8 | ||
| Soil (μg/kg) | 5 | 50 | 49.05 ± 2.97 ( | 98.1 | 6.1 |
| 200 | 198.28 ± 8.75 ( | 99.1 | 4.4 | ||
| 500 | 495.87 ± 23.22 ( | 99.2 | 4.7 | ||
| Water (μg/L) | 2.5 | 20 | 19.41 ± 1.06 ( | 97.0 | 5.4 |
| 100 | 98.76 ± 3.05 ( | 98.8 | 3.1 | ||
| 500 | 496.28 ± 14.79 ( | 99.3 | 3.0 |
LOD means limit of determination, RSD means relative standard deviation.
Concentrations and descriptive statistics for lead in children’s blood.
| No. | Range of Lead Concentration (μg/L) | Median (μg/L) | Percentile (μg/L) | BLL > 100 μg/L Number and Percent (%) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5th | 25th | 50th | 75th | 95th | |||||
| Age of subjects | |||||||||
| 0–1 | 37 | 34–556 | 92 | 36 | 50 | 92 | 128 | 334 | 18 (48.65) |
| 1–4 | 119 | 33–394 | 111 * | 49 | 78 | 111 | 165 | 292 | 69 (57.98) |
| 4–7 | 107 | 38–315 | 88 | 47 | 65 | 88 | 134 | 252 | 42 (39.25) |
| 7–10 | 91 | 36–221 | 80 | 38 | 59 | 78 | 106 | 155 | 26 (28.57) |
| 10–15 | 89 | 26–224 | 82 | 36 | 56 | 84 | 112 | 205 | 36 (40.45) |
| Gender | |||||||||
| male | 260 | 33–394 | 100 | 43 | 68 | 100 | 145 | 234 | 132 (50.77) |
| female | 183 | 26–556 | 81 ** | 38 | 59 | 81 | 110 | 238 | 59 (32.24) |
| Distance (m) | |||||||||
| 0–250 | 60 | 36–556 | 151 | 53 | 89 | 151 | 209 | 325 | 43 (71.67) |
| 250–500 | 165 | 34–394 | 106 ** | 44 | 80 | 106 | 144 | 223 | 89 (53.94) |
| 500–800 | 48 | 37–284 | 81 ** | 40 | 54 | 81 | 102 | 194 | 14 (29.17) |
| 800–1000 | 170 | 26–297 | 73 ** | 39 | 56 | 73 | 98 | 148 | 45 (26.47) |
| Direction † | |||||||||
| Northwest (NW) | 176 | 36–556 | 116 | 53 | 57 | 121 | 182 | 298 | 110 (62.5) |
| Southwest (SW) | 86 | 34–202 | 82 ** | 38 | 63 | 79 | 106 | 180 | 25 (29.07) |
| Northeast (NE) | 92 | 26–279 | 72 ** | 36 | 55 | 71 | 96 | 127 | 20 (21.74) |
| Southeast (SE) | 89 | 37–246 | 82 ** | 43 | 83 | 88 | 129 | 173 | 36 (40.45) |
| Job of parents | |||||||||
| In the recycling plant | 140 | 34–556 | 101 | 43 | 77 | 101 | 148 | 251 | 72 (51.43) |
| None in the recycling plant | 303 | 26–294 | 84 ** | 42 | 62 | 84 | 118 | 224 | 119 (39.27) |
| Total | 443 | 24–556 | 89 | 42 | 64 | 89 | 133 | 232 | 191 (43.12) |
† Northeast is Fengwa village, Southeast is Gaozhuang village, Southwest is Gonghu village and Northwest is Xinli village. * p < 0.05 (K-W Test); ** p < 0.01 (K-W Test).
Figure 2Frequency distribution of children’s BLL (a: measurement data).
Determinant of blood lead as assessed by multiple regression analysis.
| Variable | Parameter Normal Model (r2 = 0.50) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| β | |||
| Age | −0.036 | −5.0427 | 0.000 |
| Distance | −0.052 | −5.2072 | 0.000 |
| Direction | 0.010 | 0.7078 | 0.479 |
| Parents’ job | 0.060 | 2.9332 | 0.004 |
| Sex | −0.043 | −2.2574 | 0.024 |
The result of water samples (μg/L).
| Water Samples | Number | Lead Range | Median | Number and Excess Ratio (%) † |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kind | ||||
| well | 4 | <1–5 | 45 | 0(0.00) |
| canal | 12 | <1–77 | 7 | 1(8.33) |
| Direction | ||||
| Northeast | 4 | 17–77 | 23 | 1(25.00) |
| Southeast | 3 | 1–5 | 2 | 0(0.00) |
| Southwest | 5 | <1–5 | 1 | 0.00 |
| Northwest | 4 | 4–12 | 15 | 0.00 |
| Distance (m) | ||||
| ≤250 | 4 | 12–77 | 23 | 1(25.00) |
| ~500 | 4 | 4–17 | 11 | 0(0.00) |
| ~800 | 4 | 1–5 | 4 | 0(0.00) |
| ~1000 | 4 | <1–1 | 1 | 0(0.00) |
| Total | 16 | <1–77 | 7 | 1(6.25) |
† Excess is a lead concentration ratio over 50 μg/L for water.
The results of vegetable samples (mg/kg).
| Vegetable Samples | Number | Lead Range | Median | Number and Excess Ratio (%) † |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Direction | ||||
| Northeast | 9 | 0.006–1.075 | 0.051 | 3(33.33) |
| Southeast | 10 | 0.049–3.079 | 0.285 | 4(40.00) |
| Southwest | 8 | 0.007–1.475 | 0.172 | 3(37.5) |
| Northwest | 9 | 0.071–4.676 | 1.049 | 6(66.67) |
| Distance (m) | ||||
| ≤250 | 12 | 0.045–4.676 | 1.352 | 10(83.33) |
| ~500 | 8 | 0.009–1.056 | 0.451 | 5(62.50) |
| ~800 | 8 | 0.008–0.425 | 0.119 | 1(12.50) |
| ~1000 | 8 | 0.006–0.147 | 0.052 | 0(0.00) |
| Total | 36 | 0.006–4.676 | 0.265 | 16(44.44) |
† Excess is a lead concentration ratio over 0.3 mg/kg for vegetables.
The results of soil samples (mg/kg).
| Soil Samples | Number | Lead Range | Median | Exceedance and Ratio † |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kind | ||||
| Surface | 25 | 10.07–424.73 | 101.69 | 2(8.00) |
| Subsurface | 8 | 13.60–113.64 | 52.92 | 0(0.00) |
| Direction | ||||
| Northeast | 9 | 14.38–121.60 | 57.85 | 0(0.00) |
| Southeast | 7 | 13.60–121.45 | 46.17 | 0(0.00) |
| Southwest | 8 | 29.07–182.81 | 79.52 | 0(0.00) |
| Northwest | 9 | 59.67–424.73 | 120.08 | 2(22.22) |
| Distance (m) | ||||
| ≤250 | 11 | 113.64–424.73 | 121.60 | 2(18.18) |
| ~500 | 8 | 13.61–282.81 | 74.33 | 0(0.00) |
| ~800 | 8 | 25.60–101.69 | 63.16 | 0(0.00) |
| ~1000 | 6 | 10.07–41.06 | 27.47 | 0(0.00) |
| Total | 33 | 10.07–424.73 | 87.96 | 2(6.06) |
† Excess is a lead concentration ratio over 300 mg/kg for soil.
The BLLs in children in some recent research studies.
| Reference | Country | Age of Subject | Dwell Environment | Study Year | No. | Mean (μg/L) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Jamaica | 2−12years | Lead Smelting | - | 107 | 251 |
| [ | America | <12 years | smelter communities | 2002 | 169 | 16 |
| 1980 | 196 | 236 | ||||
| [ | India | 0−23months | Low socioeconomic | 2003–2004 | 178 | 72 (GM) |
| 24−47 months | 191 | 81 | ||||
| 48−71 months | 167 | 83 | ||||
| 72−95 months | 158 | 87 | ||||
| 96−119 months | 104 | 99 | ||||
| 120−143 months | 6 | 83 | ||||
| [ | Colombia | 5−9 years | Lead fishing net sinker, metal melting | 2004 | 189 | 55 |
| [ | Brazil | 0−12 years | Battery recycling | 2002 | 624 | 93 |
| [ | Chile | 5−12 years | Lead storage facilities | 1998 | 93 | 164 |
| [ | Uruguay | 0−14 years | Urban area | 2003 | 107 | 94 |
| [ | Romania | 8−12 years | Near to battery factory | 2006 | 37 | 32 |
| [ | German | Child | Normal | 2003–2006 | 35 | |
| [ | Australian | 0.5~2 years | Normal | 2001~2002 | 156 | 27 (GM) |
| 2~3 years | 2002~2003 | 169 | 24 (GM) | |||
| 3~4 years | 2003~2004 | 133 | 20 (GM) | |||
| 4~5 years | 2004~2005 | 117 | 19 (GM) | |||
| 5~7 years | 2005~2006 | 134 | 17 (GM) |