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Adult lead exposure: time for change.


We have assembled this mini-monograph on adult lead exposure to provide guidance to clinicians and public health professionals, to summarize recent thinking on lead biomarkers and their relevance to epidemiologic research, and to review two key lead-related outcomes, namely, cardiovascular and cognitive. The lead standards of the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), U.S. agency established (1970) in the Dept. of Labor (see Labor, United States Department of) to develop and enforce regulations for the safety and health of workers in businesses that are engaged in interstate  are woefully woe·ful also wo·ful  
adj.
1. Affected by or full of woe; mournful.

2. Causing or involving woe.

3. Deplorably bad or wretched:
 out of date given the growing evidence of the health effects of lead at levels of exposure previously thought to be safe, particularly newly recognized persistent or progressive effects of cumulative dose. The growing body of scientific evidence suggests that occupational standards should limit recent dose to prevent the acute effects of lead and separately limit cumulative dose to prevent the chronic effects of lead. We hope this mini-monograph will motivate renewed discussion of ways to protect lead-exposed adults in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  and around the world. Key words: adults, biomarker, cumulative dose, epidemiology, lead, lead poisoning lead poisoning or plumbism (plŭm`bĭz'əm), intoxication of the system by organic compounds containing lead. , OSHA OSHA
n.
Occupational Safety and Health Administration, a branch of the US Department of Labor responsible for establishing and enforcing safety and health standards in the workplace.
 regulations, tibia tibia: see leg.  bone lead, U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration, worker protection, X-ray fluorescence X-ray fluorescence (XRF) is the emission of characteristic "secondary" (or fluorescent) X-rays from a material that has been excited by bombarding with high-energy X-rays or gamma rays. , XRF XRF X-Ray Fluorescence
XRF X-Ray Flash
XRF Cross Reference
XRF Extended Recovery Facility (IBM)
XRF Extended Reliability Feature
XRF Cross Reference File
XRF External Reference
. Environ Health Perspect 115:451-454 (2007). doi:10.1289/ehp.9782 available via http://dx.doi.org/ [Online 22 December 2006]

**********

Public health and regulatory efforts in the United States have achieved great successes over the last 40 years regarding environmental lead exposure. Chronological trend data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys have documented a decline in average adult blood lead levels from approximately 15 [micro]g/dL in the 1970s to the current 1-2 [micro]g/dL (Annest et al. 1983; Muntner et al. 2005; Pirkle et al. 1998). Similar changes have occurred in children in the context of recommendations by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), agency of the U.S. Public Health Service since 1973, with headquarters in Atlanta; it was established in 1946 as the Communicable Disease Center.  CDC See Control Data, century date change and Back Orifice.

CDC - Control Data Corporation
) for a progressive decline in the level of concern of lead in a child's blood that should trigger other specific actions (from 40 to 30 [micro]g/dL in 1975, 30 to 25 [micro]g/dL in 1985, and 25 to 10 [micro]g/dL in 1991). This trend was driven by a steady accumulation of research that demonstrates adverse effects in children at progressively lower levels of exposure and reflects the success of a number of regulatory actions that removed lead from gasoline and many other consumer products such as paints and solder solder (sŏd`ər), metal alloy used in the molten state as a metallic binder. The type of solder to be used is determined by the metals to be united. Soft solders are commonly composed of lead and tin and have low melting points. Hard solders (i.  used for plumbing and food cans.

In contrast, despite a growing body of research that demonstrates adverse effects in adults at progressively lower levels of exposure, the lead standards of the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), promulgated prom·ul·gate  
tr.v. prom·ul·gat·ed, prom·ul·gat·ing, prom·ul·gates
1. To make known (a decree, for example) by public declaration; announce officially. See Synonyms at announce.

2.
 in final form for general industry (29 CFR CFR

See: Cost and Freight
 1910.1025; OSHA 2006a) in 1978 and for construction (29 CFR 1926.62; OSHA 2006b) in 1993 have not changed in their allowance that workers can attain blood lead levels up to 40 [micro]g/dL for their working lifetimes. OSHA, relying on studies at that time, developed these standards when most workers started employment in lead-exposed jobs with average blood lead levels in the 10- to 15-[micro]g/dL range because of high environmental exposures. As such, the research that formed the basis of the health protection goals in the standards was primarily from the 1960s and 1970s and earlier. This lack of change has no doubt contributed to a trend in occupational lead exposure that has not declined as steeply as environmental lead exposure. In 2002, a total of 10,658 adults with blood lead levels of [greater than or equal to] 25 [micro]g/dL were reported to the CDC by 35 states (CDC 2004). Of these, 1,854 had levels of [greater than or equal to] 40 [micro]g/dL. These numbers are likely to underestimate the true magnitude of the problem because many workers who should be in employer-sponsored surveillance programs to follow their blood lead concentrations are not well monitored (Nelson and Kaufman 1998; Papanek et al. 1992; Rudolph et al. 1990).

The recognition of the inadequacy of the OSHA lead standards is not new (Landrigan et al. 1990; Silbergeld et al. 1991). However, the quality of the evidence demonstrating that lead exposure at levels below the OSHA standard is associated with significant adverse effects has dramatically improved. Epidemiologic methods in general and as applied to research on the health effects of lead have evolved considerably during this time, with more rigorous attention to study design, subject selection, causal pathways, lead dose, lead biomarkers, and genetic susceptibility factors, particularly regarding such issues as timing and accumulation of dose and the development of acute and chronic health effects. Acute health effects due to recent dose are thought more likely to be reversible in nature, whereas chronic health effects due to cumulative dose are thought more likely to be irreversible in nature. It is thus critical to address these issues and consider them in research studies.

Purposes of the Mini-Monograph

This mini-monograph is meant to serve several purposes. First, it provides recommendations to the medical and public health communities in the medical management of adults with lead exposure. Second, it is a discussion of the state-of-the-art thinking on epidemiologic studies epidemiologic study A study that compares 2 groups of people who are alike except for one factor, such as exposure to a chemical or the presence of a health effect; the investigators try to determine if any factor is associated with the health effect  of the health effects of lead in adults, particularly regarding the use and interpretation of lead biomarkers, study population and design issues, and complex causal pathways involving how lead affects human health. Third, the mini-monograph includes two systematic reviews (Navas-Acien et al. 2007; Shih et al. 2007) of epidemiologic evidence regarding two of the most important health outcomes associated with lead, specifically, the effects on the cardiovascular and central nervous systems.

Currently, no other similar compilations have summarized recent scientific findings and their relevance to clinical and public health practice regarding lead-exposed adults. Furthermore, although many authors have increasingly recognized the importance of recent and cumulative lead dose as predictors of adverse health effects, especially for lead, no documents have summarized these issues and their relevance to protection of lead-exposed adults, or made recommendations for protection that use limits on both recent dose and cumulative dose. Finally, it is a call to action. The OSHA lead standards provide inadequate protection to lead workers; the existing evidence is compelling that we are subjecting lead workers to too large a burden of risk for both acute and chronic health effects.

We have assembled five articles, including the present article, into this mini-monograph on adult lead exposure (Hu et al. 2007; Kosnett et al. 2007; Navas-Acien et al. 2007; Shih et al. 2007). As described below, the mini-monograph was motivated largely by the work of a national expert panel on adult lead exposure that spent over 2 years discussing these issues. In this first article, we describe the history and limitations of the OSHA lead standard, the process of the expert national panel, the purpose of the other articles in the mini-monograph, and provide some personal recommendations on what is required to protect workers from the health effects of lead.

Process for Development of the Guidelines

The first impetus for the articles assembled in the mini-monograph was from the Adult Blood Lead Epidemiology and Surveillance (ABLES ABLES Adult Blood Lead Epidemiology and Surveillance
ABLES American Board of Lower Extremity Surgery
) Program, a National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health,
n.pr an institute of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that is responsible for assuring safe and healthful working conditions and for developing standards of safety and health.
 (NIOSH NIOSH National Institute for Occupational Safety & Health, see there

NIOSH Recommendations for Safety & Health Standards

Agent  NIOSH REL*/OSHA PEL  Health effects
) endeavor currently operating in 38 states. In 2000, ABLES formed an ad hoc Committee ad hoc committee A committee formed with the purpose of addressing a specific issue or issues, which theoretically is disbanded once its raison d'etre is finished  for the Development of Adult Blood Lead Level Medical Management Guidelines and a draft document was produced (unpublished). The Association for Occupational and Environmental Clinics (AOEC AOEC Association of Occupational & Environmental Clinics
AOEC Aero-Optic Evaluation Center
AOEC Area Optical Evaluation Center
) agreed to sponsor the next steps in the review and revision of the draft document, and obtained federal funding in support of this activity. AOEC next assembled a panel of 13 experts with training and experience in the areas of lead toxicology toxicology, study of poisons, or toxins, from the standpoint of detection, isolation, identification, and determination of their effects on the human body. Toxicology may be considered the branch of pharmacology devoted to the study of the poisonous effects of drugs. , epidemiology, occupational medicine, occupational health nursing, industrial hygiene, and public health policy and practice, from academic institutions, government, labor organizations, and industry to review the document. Panel members included (in alphabetical order) Rose Goldman, Dana Headapohl, Karen Hipkins, Howard Hu, Michael Kosnett, Barbara Materna, Pamela Reich, Stephen Rothenberg, Brian Schwartz, Eugene Shippen Ship´pen

n. 1. A stable; a cowhouse.
, Richard Wedeen (Panel Chair), Laura Welch, and Alan Woolf. Kathy Kirkland (Executive Director of the AOEC), coordinated the activities of the panel.

The panel met in March 2003 in Washington, DC, and then held a series of conference calls through 2005 to make revisions to the document. At the onset, the panel chose to focus on health-based recommendations and not to explicitly consider feasibility of implementing these guidelines. The panel also generally decided not to explicitly consider socioeconomic considerations for lead workers, for example, if a cumulative lead dose limit required workers currently in the lead-using industries to discontinue all further work in lead and thus had to leave their jobs. Measures designed to protect health may incur unacceptable costs to individual workers and industry, but the considerations of panel members and authors of the articles in the mini-monograph were solely motivated by scientific evidence regarding health. Conclusions stated in all articles in the mini-monograph are not intended to be enforceable standards, which by law must reflect feasibility and experience gained under OSHA and other health and safety laws. The third article (Kosnett et al. 2007) in the mini-monograph was prepared by a subgroup of panel members (8 of 13 members) who were interested in and willing to continue to work on these issues after the work of the panel ended. The article is not a systematic review but rather panel members relied on selected, influential published articles within the extant literature Extant literature refers to texts that have survived from the past to the present time. Extant literature can be divided into extant original manuscripts, copies of original manuscripts, quotations and paraphrases of passages of non-extant texts contained in other works,  as well as experience and expert opinion to come to consensus in reaching the article's recommendations. However, it represents only the opinions of its authors.

Overall, there was a remarkable degree of consensus among panel members. The two industry representatives on the panel voiced a number of concerns during the process, but other panel members generally agreed on all but a few points. Although the panel made considerable progress in reaching consensus, a number of challenges to its process must be acknowledged. Funding was available only for one face-to-face meeting. This meeting highlighted many difficult issues that needed continued analysis and discussion, but all further discussion was only available by conference call. In contrast to typical Institute of Medicine (IOM IOM

See: Index and Option Market
) committees charged with reviewing scientific evidence and making recommendations for public health or clinical medicine (National Academy of Sciences 2006), our committee had more limited resources and lacked an agreed upon Adj. 1. agreed upon - constituted or contracted by stipulation or agreement; "stipulatory obligations"
stipulatory

noncontroversial, uncontroversial - not likely to arouse controversy
, standardized approach According to International Convergence of Capital Measurement and Capital Standards, known as Basel II, the standardized approach is a set of risk measurement techniques for banking institutions. The term may be used in the context of credit risk or operational risk.  to review of the evidence and presentation of its analysis and summary, as is used by IOM committees. Despite these limitations, the majority of panel members supported the final document in the mini-monograph, which provides clear recommendations on a number of management approaches for lead-exposed adults that we believe will be useful to public health and clinical practitioners.

Brief Review of Requirements of the OSHA Lead Standards

A review of the OSHA lead standards and their preambles allows several conclusions. First, the standards emphasize prevention of acute symptoms in several organ systems and prioritize other measurable health effects in a way that is likely to be considered differently today. Most health effects that are considered are of relatively short latency and are more likely to occur after high-level, short-term exposures. For example, there is extensive discussion of the hematopoietic system hematopoietic system
n.
The blood-making organs, principally the bone marrow and lymph nodes.


Hematopoietic system
The system in the body which is responsible for the production of blood cells.
 in which measurable health effects occur with short latency after moderate to high lead exposures and very little consideration of long-latency, chronic health effects. Such chronic health outcomes as cognitive dysfunction, hypertension risk, and renal dysfunction after long-term, low-level exposures were not considered in any substantive detail. So, while the OSHA standards mainly focused on prevention of symptoms, hematopoietic hematopoietic /he·ma·to·poi·et·ic/ (-poi-et´ik)
1. pertaining to hematopoiesis.

2. an agent that promotes hematopoiesis.


hematopoietic

1. pertaining to or affecting the formation of blood cells.
 outcomes, and renal dysfunction associated with high-level exposures, the highest priority concerns of today would be cognitive decline, hypertension and other cardiovascular outcomes, long-latency renal disease Renal disease
Kidney disease.

Mentioned in: Glycogen Storage Diseases

hypertension High blood pressure Cardiovascular disease An abnormal ↑ systemic arterial pressure, corresponding to a systolic BP of > 160 mm Hg
, and reproductive outcomes.

Second, the standards considered the level of lead in whole blood to be the key lead biomarker and, although not explicitly discussed, blood lead was generally used only as a measure of relatively recent dose. There was no consideration of cumulative dose or long-term lower-level exposures despite the fact that many health outcomes associated with environmental exposures are due to cumulative dose (e.g., environmental tobacco smoke environmental tobacco smoke (ETS/passive smoke),
n the gaseous by-product of burning tobacco products, including but not limited to commercially manufactured cigarettes and cigars; contains toxic elements harmful to the health of adults and children
 and lung cancer lung cancer, cancer that originates in the tissues of the lungs. Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death in the United States in both men and women. Like other cancers, lung cancer occurs after repeated insults to the genetic material of the cell. ) and the fact that lead was known to accumulate in bone and thus has long residence times in the body. Health physicists were developing and validating X-ray fluorescence (XRF) systems for measurement of lead in bone at that time, but certainly by the late 1980s or early 1990s, there was extensive experience with measurement of lead in bone by cadmium-109-induced K-shell XRF, if not widespread availability. Third, there was no consideration about whether health effects could progress after cessation of occupational exposure. Finally, there was little consideration of susceptible subgroups such as older individuals or those with certain genetic polymorphisms. In fairness, little was known about genetic susceptibility to lead poisoning in the 1970s, but a large number of studies have been published on the topic since that time. Any new recommendations for occupational lead exposure standards should recognize that there are susceptible subgroups and limits should protect the most susceptible workers.

Under the OSHA standards, medical surveillance is an essential part of an employer's lead safety program and includes biological monitoring with periodic blood lead testing, medical evaluation, and treatment if needed, and intervention to prevent or control exposure levels. Employers must offer medical surveillance to workers if airborne lead exposure is 30 [micro]g/[m.sup.3] (8-hr time-weighted average) or higher for > 30 days/year. Although slight differences exist in the two OSHA lead standards, OSHA requires that workers in general industry be removed from further lead exposure if a single blood lead level is [greater than or equal to] 60 [micro]g/dL, or if three determinations over 6 months average [greater than or equal to] 50 [micro]g/dL, until levels decline to < 40 [micro]g/dL. An important implication of these limits is that, because OSHA accepts a blood lead level of 40 [micro]g/dL for a working lifetime (40 years), a cumulative blood lead index of 1,600 [micro]g-years/dL (calculated as the average blood lead level multiplied by the years over which it is averaged, or, more accurately as the area under the curve of blood lead versus time) is an acceptable cumulative dose. As discussed in greater detail in the second article (Hu et al. 2007) in the mini-monograph, this cumulative blood lead index would result in a bone lead level (in the tibia) at the end of employment of 80-160 [micro]g lead/g bone mineral. This mini-monograph provides extensive evidence that this cumulative dose is associated with substantial adverse health risks.

If new OSHA standards are developed and promulgated, there will arise a number of complex and challenging issues. For example, because of the significant reduction of lead in the general environment, new workers will enter lead jobs with very low blood lead levels, whereas others who have worked with lead or who are older will have much higher blood lead levels and body burdens. This may motivate employers to hire younger workers and terminate older workers. This mini-monograph does not address these complexities and leaves consideration of these issues to future efforts.

New Evidence on the Health Effects of Lead

The growth in knowledge about the health effects of lead has been dramatic since the promulgation PROMULGATION. The order given to cause a law to be executed, and to make it public it differs from publication. (q.v.) 1 Bl. Com. 45; Stat. 6 H. VI., c. 4.
     2.
 of the OSHA lead standards. For example, in 1995, Balbus-Kornfeld et al. (1995) reported there was no evidence for or against the hypothesis that cumulative lead dose caused cognitive dysfunction or decline, because no epidemiologic studies had estimated cumulative dose and the four existing prospective studies were small, with relatively low follow-up rates, and of relatively short duration. As discussed in the second article (Hu et al. 2007) in the mini-monograph, longitudinal studies longitudinal studies,
n.pl the epidemiologic studies that record data from a respresentative sample at repeated intervals over an extended span of time rather than at a single or limited number over a short period.
 provide critical evidence because confounding confounding

when the effects of two, or more, processes on results cannot be separated, the results are said to be confounded, a cause of bias in disease studies.


confounding factor
 is less likely to invalidate in·val·i·date  
tr.v. in·val·i·dat·ed, in·val·i·dat·ing, in·val·i·dates
To make invalid; nullify.



in·val
 inferences and such studies allow differentiation of reversible, persistent, and progressive health effects, which also requires that occupational exposures have ended. Since that time, at least 20 papers have been published (or are in press) that document studies measuring cognitive function cognitive function Neurology Any mental process that involves symbolic operations–eg, perception, memory, creation of imagery, and thinking; CFs encompasses awareness and capacity for judgment , blood lead, and bone lead, thereby allowing more careful consideration of recent and cumulative dose than in earlier studies. This dramatic growth in scientific evidence has not been confined to cognitive function; similar, if not greater, growth has occurred regarding other important health effects of lead exposure such as hypertension and other cardiovascular outcomes (Lustberg and Silbergeld 2002) and renal disease (Weaver et al. 2005). These new studies allow much better evaluation of such key issues as recent, intermediate-term, and cumulative dose; acute and chronic health effects; and reversibility, persistence, or progression of health effects.

Recommendations for a New OSHA Standard

In our opinion, which does not necessarily represent the view of the expert panel, we believe that lead poisoning must be thought about as a chronic disease. Once a significant lead body burden has accumulated, the health effects are likely to be progressive and, to a large degree, irreversible. Like diabetes and other chronic diseases, these health conditions can be managed, but some health consequences may not be preventable after a cumulative dose threshold is exceeded. We must prevent cumulative dose, not just follow blood lead levels. We must focus on prevention of long-term, progressive health effects, such as cognitive decline, and the increased risk of cardiovascular and circulatory circulatory /cir·cu·la·to·ry/ (ser´ku-lah-tor?e)
1. pertaining to circulation, particularly that of the blood.

2. containing blood.


cir·cu·la·to·ry
n.
1.
 mortality. We must also prevent the shorter latency health effects of recent dose, as reflected in blood lead levels, such as elevations in blood pressure and the cognitive dysfunction present at only moderate blood lead levels. We must acknowledge that there are likely to be susceptible subgroups, as suggested by recent studies demonstrating worse lead-associated outcomes in persons with certain polymorphisms in the apolipoprotein E apolipoprotein E A 34-kD cholesterol-binding glycoprotein, which comprises 15% of VLDL; apoE maps to chromosome 19, is secreted by macrophages that mediate the uptake of lipoproteins–VLDL, HDL, LDL and cholesterol esters into cells via distinct binding  (Stewart et al. 2001), vitamin D vitamin D

Any of a group of fat-soluble alcohols important in calcium metabolism in animals to form strong bones and teeth and prevent rickets and osteoporosis. It is formed by ultraviolet radiation (sunlight) of sterols (see steroid) present in the skin.
 receptor (Lee et al. 2001a, 2001b; Schwartz et al. 2000a, 2000b), [Na.sup.+],[K.sup.+]-ATPase (Glenn et al. 2001), and [delta]-aminolevulinic acid genes (Bergdahl et al. 1997; Schwartz et al. 2000a, 1997; Wetmur 1994; Wetmur et al. 1991; Wu et al. 2003), protein kinase C Protein kinase C ('PKC', EC 2.7.11.13) is a family of protein kinases consisting of ~10 isozymes.[1] They are divided into three subfamilies: conventional (or classical), novel, and atypical based on their second messenger requirements.  phenotypes (Hwang et al. 2002), and persons with other common chronic diseases such as type II diabetes Type II diabetes
Type II diabetes is the most common form of diabetes and usually appears in middle aged adults. It is often associated with obesity and may be delayed or controlled with diet and exercise.

Mentioned in: Diabetic Ketoacidosis
 (Tsaih et al. 2004), and promulgate To officially announce, to publish, to make known to the public; to formally announce a statute or a decision by a court.  lead standards that prevent adverse health outcomes in these most susceptible subgroups.

We recommend that OSHA modify the lead standards to prevent both the acute health effects of recent dose and the chronic health effects of cumulative dose. It should be noted that the members of the panel considered the use of tibia lead levels and cumulative blood lead index in detail, but concluded they could not recommend routine clinical use of the former because of limited availability When customers of the PSTN make telephone calls, they commonly make use of a telecommunications network called a switched-circuit network. In a switched-circuit network, devices known as switches are used to connect the caller to the callee.  and the on-going but incomplete development of standardized protocols for intercalibration--the latter because of concerns about logistics and practicality. However, the panel recognized that the main advances in epidemiologic research on the health effects of lead in the past two decades have been recognition of the importance of cumulative dose and that a single or few blood lead levels do not estimate cumulative dose. Accumulation of dose in this context is a critically important concept that has not been generally considered in occupational safety and health regulations to date and is the motivation for many of the recommendations in this mini-monograph.

We would favor limits that keep blood lead levels < 20 [micro]g/dL to prevent the acute effects of recent dose. For the prevention of the chronic health effects of cumulative dose, the available evidence suggests that tibia lead levels should not be allowed to exceed 15 [micro]g lead/g bone mineral; this could also be achieved by maintaining the cumulative blood lead index below approximately 200-400 [micro]g-years/dL (equivalent to an average blood lead level of 20 [micro]g/dL for 10-20 years or of 10 [micro]g/dL for 20-40 years). Unfortunately, other scientists and public health professionals made similar recommendations more than 15 years ago (Landrigan et al. 1990; Silbergeld et al. 1991), and little has resulted. We hope this mini-monograph will have a larger impact on policy.

These recommendations require more stringent exposure limits than currently exist in the OSHA standards and a tighter link between exposure and dose in surveillance programs. The OSHA permissible exposure limit The Permissible Exposure Limit (PEL or OSHA PEL) is a legal limit in the United States for exposure of an employee to a substance, usually expressed in parts per million (ppm), or sometimes in milligrams per cubic metre (mg/m3).  of 50 [micro]g/[m.sup.3] was based on industry claims of feasibility for engineering and ventilation controls, but current technologies are better than those that were available in the 1970s. However, the lower limits may require greater reliance on respirators, which will have implications for both workers and employers.

Organization of the Mini-Monograph

The mini-monograph consists of four other articles:

The article by Hu et al. (2007) is a review of issues surrounding epidemiologic methods of particular relevance to studies of the health effects of lead, lead exposure and dose, and lead biomarkers. These issues are relevant to each of the other articles in the mini-monograph.

Kosnett et al. (2007) summarize recommendations for management of adults with lead exposure. This article was prepared by a majority of members of an expert panel (8 of 13 members) and offers advice to public health professionals and clinicians in the medical and nonmedical management of lead-exposed adults. The expert panel's final document also went to the AOEC for additional editing, which resulted in the greatly shortened manuscript on the AOEC website AOEC 2006). The manuscript and recommendations on the AOEC website were not written by panel members; rather, they were rewritten by a small committee of AOEC members.

Navas-Acien et al. (2007) review the epidemiologic evidence evaluating lead exposure and cardiovascular outcomes. Cardiovascular outcomes were critical to the deliberations of the panel, but such detailed analysis of studies could not be incorporated into the panel's main article. Here, the authors consider this evidence in detail. They summarize the review articles on blood pressure and hypertension, but go into great detail on cardiovascular outcomes other than blood pressure and hypertension, including important clinical ones (e.g., myocardial infarction myocardial infarction: see under infarction. ).

The review by Shih et al. (2007) is a discussion of the epidemiologic evidence evaluating lead exposure and cognitive outcomes. Like cardiovascular outcomes, many panel members considered cognitive outcomes to be from a critical target organ target organ
n.
A tissue or organ that is affected by a specific hormone.


target organ,
n the organ or body part whose activity levels demonstrate change in the course of biofeedback.
 and prevention of these outcomes was an important motivation. Here, the authors considered only articles that measured blood lead, bone lead, and cognitive outcomes, so the key issues discussed by Hu et al. (2007) could be evaluated.

Other outcomes were also considered by the panel but additional manuscripts were not solicited for the mini-monograph for several reasons. First, at the time of preparation of the mini-monograph, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), independent agency of the U.S. government, with headquarters in Washington, D.C. It was established in 1970 to reduce and control air and water pollution, noise pollution, and radiation and to ensure the safe handling and  (U.S. EPA EPA eicosapentaenoic acid.

EPA
abbr.
eicosapentaenoic acid


EPA,
n.pr See acid, eicosapentaenoic.

EPA,
n.
) was in the process of updating its Air Criteria Document for Lead (U.S. EPA 2005) and systematic reviews of evidence by organ system will be a result. We are aware of several authors of chapters for that document who have already made plans to submit their chapters for publication in other specialty journals (Ekong et al. 2006). Finally, the CDC has convened a national panel on lead and reproductive outcomes (CDC 2006), so we did not solicit a reproductive chapter in advance of that effort.

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an enzyme of which the concentration in erythrocytes is a widely used indicator of the level of lead poisoning in animals.
 (ALAD ALAD

d-aminolevulinic acid dehydratase.
) in human erythrocytes Erythrocytes
Red blood cells.

Mentioned in: Bartonellosis

erythrocytes (ē·rithˑ·rō·sīts),
n.pl red blood cells.
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n.
The quality or state of being toxic to kidney cells.


nephrotoxicity(ne·fr
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n.
ATPase.
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de·hy·dra·tase
n.
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in·tern or in·terne
n.
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Nelson NA, Kaufman JD. 1998. Employees exposed to lead in Washington state nonconstruction workplaces: a starting point Noun 1. starting point - earliest limiting point
terminus a quo

commencement, get-go, offset, outset, showtime, starting time, beginning, start, kickoff, first - the time at which something is supposed to begin; "they got an early start"; "she knew from the
 for hazard surveillance. Am Ind Hyg Assoc J 59(4):269-277.

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Rudolph L, Sharp DS, Samuels S Samuels is a surname, and may refer to:
  • Andrew Samuels
  • Arthur Warren Samuels
  • Ashe Samuels
  • Carlton Samuels
  • Chris Samuels
  • Dave Samuels
  • David Samuels
  • Dr.
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genotype

Genetic makeup of an organism. The genotype determines the hereditary potentials and limitations of an individual.
 modifies four hour urinary lead excretion after oral administration of dimercaptosuccinic acid Dimercaptosuccinic acid, or DMSA, is the chemical compound with the formula HO2CCH(SH)CH(SH)CO2H. This colourless solid contains two carboxylic acid and two thiol groups, the latter being responsible for the mildly unpleasant odour of this dicarboxylic acid. . Occup Environ Med 54(4):241-246.

Schwartz BS, Stewart WF, Kelsey KT, Simon D, Park S, Links JM, et al. 2000b. Associations of tibial tibial

pertaining to the tibia.


tibial crest
a longitudinal prominence on the cranial border of the proximal tibia. Its proximal end (tibial tubercle) has a growth plate separate from the proximal tibia; hyperflexion injuries to
 lead levels with BsmI polymorphisms in the vitamin D receptor in former organolead manufacturing workers. Environ Health Perspect 108: 199-203.

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Stewart R, Russ C, Richards M, Brayne C, Lovestone S, Mann A. 2001. Apolipoprotein E genotype, vascular risk and early cognitive impairment in an African Caribbean population. Dement de·ment  
tr.v. de·ment·ed, de·ment·ing, de·ments
1. To make (a person) insane.

2. To cause (a person) to lose intellectual capacity.
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Tsaih SW, Korrick S, Schwartz J, Amarasiriwardena C, Aro A, Sparrow D, et al. 2004. Lead, diabetes, hypertension, and renal function In medicine (nephrology) renal function is an indication of the state of the kidney and its role in physiology. Indirect markers
Most doctors use the plasma concentrations of creatinine, urea, and electrolytes to determine renal function.
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Weaver VM, Jaar BG, Schwartz BS, Todd AC, Ahn KD, Lee SS, et al. 2005. Associations among lead dose biomarkers, uric acid uric acid (yr`ĭk), white, odorless, tasteless crystalline substance formed as a result of purine degradation in man, other primates, dalmatians, birds, snakes, and lizards. , and renal function in Korean lead workers. Environ Health Perspect 113:36-42.

Wetmur JG. 1994. Influence of the common human [delta]-aminolevulinate dehydratase polymorphism polymorphism, of minerals, property of crystallizing in two or more distinct forms. Calcium carbonate is dimorphous (two forms), crystallizing as calcite or aragonite. Titanium dioxide is trimorphous; its three forms are brookite, anatase (or octahedrite), and rutile.  on lead body burden. Environ Health Perspect 102(suppl 3):215-219.

Wetmur JG, Lehnert G, Desnick RJ. 1991. The delta-aminolevulinate dehydratase polymorphism: higher blood lead levels in lead workers and environmentally exposed children with the 1-2 and 2-2 isozymes. Environ Res 56(2):109-119.

Wu MT, Kelsey K, Schwartz J, Sparrow D, Weiss S, Hu H. 2003. A [delta]-aminolevulinic acid dehydratase (ALAD) polymorphism may modify the relationship of low-level lead exposure to uricemia and renal function: the normative aging study. Environ Health Perspect 111:335-341.

Brian S. Schwartz (1,2) and Howard Hu (3)

(1) Departments of Environmental Health Sciences and Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health is part of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland, U.S. It was the first institution of its kind in the world.

Founded in 1916 by William H. Welch and John D.
, Baltimore, Maryland "Baltimore" redirects here. For the surrounding county, see Baltimore County, Maryland. For other uses, see Baltimore (disambiguation).
Baltimore is an independent city located in the state of Maryland in the United States.
, USA; (2) Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins Noun 1. Johns Hopkins - United States financier and philanthropist who left money to found the university and hospital that bear his name in Baltimore (1795-1873)
Hopkins

2.
 School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA; (3) Department of Environmental Health Sciences, University of Michigan (body, education) University of Michigan - A large cosmopolitan university in the Midwest USA. Over 50000 students are enrolled at the University of Michigan's three campuses. The students come from 50 states and over 100 foreign countries.  School of Public Health, Ann Arbor, Michigan

“Ann Arbor” redirects here. For other uses, see Ann Arbor (disambiguation).
Ann Arbor is a city in the U.S. state of Michigan and the county seat of Washtenaw County.
, USA

This article is part of the mini-monograph "Lead Exposure and Health Effects in Adults: Evidence, Management, and Implications for Policy."

Address correspondence to B.S. Schwartz, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 615 North Wolfe St., Rm. W7041, Baltimore, MD 21205 USA. Telephone: (410) 955-4130. Fax: (410) 955-1811. E-mail: bschwart@jhsph.edu

This work was supported in part by National Institute on Aging The National Institute on Aging is a division of the U.S. National Institutes of Health, located in Bethesda, Maryland.

Formed in 1974, NIA's mission is to improve the health and well-being of older Americans through research. It is the primary U.S.
 grants R01-AG19604, R01-AG10785; National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences The National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) is one of 27 Institutes and Centers of the National Institutes of Health (NIH),which is a component of the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS). The Director of the NIEHS is Dr. David A. Schwartz.  (NIEHS NIEHS National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIH, DHHS) ) grants R01-ES07198, R01-ES05257, R01-ES10798, and P42-ES05947; and NIEHS Center grant P30-ES00002.

The authors declare they have no competing financial interests.

Received 3 October 2006; accepted 4 December 2006.
COPYRIGHT 2007 National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Mini-Monograph
Author:Hu, Howard
Publication:Environmental Health Perspectives
Date:Mar 1, 2007
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