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Chloramine catch: water disinfectant can raise lead exposure.


Many water treatment systems around the nation have stopped using chlorine to disinfect To remove the virus code that has attached itself to a legitimate file. Sometimes, the antivirus program cannot untangle the code, and the infected file has to be deleted. See quarantine.  drinking water drinking water

supply of water available to animals for drinking supplied via nipples, in troughs, dams, ponds and larger natural water sources; an insufficient supply leads to dehydration; it can be the source of infection, e.g. leptospirosis, salmonellosis, or of poisoning, e.g.
. Chlorine reacts with dissolved organic matter in water to create by-products that are suspected of causing human health problems, including some forms of cancer. Many water treatment plants now use disinfectants called chloramines, combinations of chlorine and ammonia. But in some water systems this switch has coincided with an increase in lead in drinking water, perhaps because chloramines cause lead to leach from pipes, fixtures, and solder. Now a team of researchers from Duke University has measured the potential effect of switching from chlorine to chloramines on blood lead levels [EHP EHP
abbr.
1. effective horsepower

2. electric horsepower
 115:221-225; Miranda et al.].

The scientists used geographic information system-based software to link blood lead data, housing data (dissolved lead in water can occur only when a lead source is present, a condition that is much more likely in older housing), drinking water sources, and census data for 7,270 children in Wayne County, North Carolina Wayne County is a county located in the U.S. state of North Carolina. As of 2000, the population was 113,329. It is included in the Goldsboro, North Carolina Metropolitan Statistical Area. Its county seat is Goldsboro6. . Blood lead data were obtained from a statewide registry of all blood lead screens conducted on North Carolina North Carolina, state in the SE United States. It is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean (E), South Carolina and Georgia (S), Tennessee (W), and Virginia (N). Facts and Figures


Area, 52,586 sq mi (136,198 sq km). Pop.
 children under the age of six. The authors noted that the lead-screened children were well distributed across different ages of housing in Wayne County.

The county has two main public water systems. About 70% of the residential tax parcels get drinking water through Wayne Water Systems, which uses chlorine for disinfection disinfection,
n the process of destroying pathogenic organisms or rendering them inert.

disinfection, full oral cavity,
n a procedure used to reduce active periodontal disease, usually completed within a certain short time frame.
. Another 28% of parcels get drinking water through the Goldsboro Water System, which has used chloramines for disinfection since March 2000.

The Goldsboro Water System's change to chloramines was associated with an increase in children's blood lead levels, suggesting that use of chloramines could lead to an increase in lead exposure. The impact of the change to chloramines was progressively mitigated in newer housing, however. In houses built after 1950, the newness of the home was a stronger influence on blood lead than the use of chloramines.

Much uncertainty still surrounds the underlying environmental chemistry of how combinations of disinfectants, anticorrosives, coagulants, and fluoridation fluoridation (flr'ĭdā`shən), process of adding a fluoride to the water supply of a community to preserve the teeth of the inhabitants.  agents combine with water qualities such as pH, alkalinity al·ka·lin·i·ty
n.
The alkali concentration or alkaline quality of a substance that contains alkali.



alkalinity

1. the quality of being alkaline.

2.
, temperature, oxidation potential, and concentrations of other chemical species to affect lead in drinking water. Nevertheless, these results provide guidance to both water systems and health departments on which houses should be targeted for monitoring of lead in both water and residents' blood.
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Title Annotation:Science Selections
Author:Tibbetts, John
Publication:Environmental Health Perspectives
Date:Feb 1, 2007
Words:388
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