S Tong1. 1. Department of Social and Preventive Medicine, University of Queensland, Herston, Australia.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Although enormous effort has been focused over the past two decades on examining the potential adverse effects of exposure to environmental lead on human health, there has been a debate over the persistence and dynamic pattern of these effects. METHODOLOGY: Articles relevant to this issue which were published between January 1982 and December 1996 were retrieved from Medline and adjunct searching methods (i.e. hand searching of key journals, review of the bibliographies of reports known to be relevant, consulting with experts, and use of Science Citation Index). RESULTS: Currently available epidemiological evidence suggests that 'low' level exposure to lead in early childhood is likely to cause a moderate but real and detectable effect on cognitive development, and this effect appears to persist into later childhood. The findings from four long-term prospective studies seem to support the constant decrement model which assumes that cognitive deficits resulting from early lead exposure persist over an extended period of time even when exposure decreases. CONCLUSION: From a public health perspective, it is highly desirable and prudent to reduce the dispersive uses of lead. Since lead is ubiquitous and persistent in the environment and may have a subtle and persistent effect on cognitive development, how to set the environmental standards for lead exposure is an important scientific issue still open for debate.
OBJECTIVES: Although enormous effort has been focused over the past two decades on examining the potential adverse effects of exposure to environmental lead on human health, there has been a debate over the persistence and dynamic pattern of these effects. METHODOLOGY: Articles relevant to this issue which were published between January 1982 and December 1996 were retrieved from Medline and adjunct searching methods (i.e. hand searching of key journals, review of the bibliographies of reports known to be relevant, consulting with experts, and use of Science Citation Index). RESULTS: Currently available epidemiological evidence suggests that 'low' level exposure to lead in early childhood is likely to cause a moderate but real and detectable effect on cognitive development, and this effect appears to persist into later childhood. The findings from four long-term prospective studies seem to support the constant decrement model which assumes that cognitive deficits resulting from early lead exposure persist over an extended period of time even when exposure decreases. CONCLUSION: From a public health perspective, it is highly desirable and prudent to reduce the dispersive uses of lead. Since lead is ubiquitous and persistent in the environment and may have a subtle and persistent effect on cognitive development, how to set the environmental standards for lead exposure is an important scientific issue still open for debate.
Authors: A Kuruvilla; V V Pillay; T Venkatesh; P Adhikari; M Chakrapani; C S Clark; H D'Souza; G Menezes; N Nayak; R Clark; S Sinha Journal: Indian J Pediatr Date: 2004-06 Impact factor: 1.967
Authors: Ines Gonzalez-Casanova; Aryeh D Stein; Albino Barraza-Villarreal; Raquel Garcia Feregrino; Ann DiGirolamo; Leticia Hernandez-Cadena; Juan A Rivera; Isabelle Romieu; Usha Ramakrishnan Journal: Int J Hyg Environ Health Date: 2018-04-22 Impact factor: 5.840