Bradman A, Eskenazi B, Sutton P, Athanasoulis M, Goldman L R
Division of Environmental and Occupational Disease Control, California Department of Health Services, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA.
Environ Health Perspect. 2001 Oct;109(10):1079-84. doi: 10.1289/ehp.011091079.
The evidence that iron deficiency increases lead child exposure is based primarily on animal data and limited human studies, and some of this evidence is contradictory. No studies of iron status and blood lead levels in children have accounted for environmental lead contamination and, therefore, the source of their exposure. Thus, no studies have directly determined whether iron deficiency modifies the relationship of environmental lead and blood lead. In this study, we compared blood lead levels of iron-deficient and iron-replete children living in low, medium, or highly contaminated environments. Measurements of lead in paint, soil, dust, and blood, age of housing, and iron status were collected from 319 children ages 1-5. We developed two lead exposure factors to summarize the correlated exposure variables: Factor 1 summarized all environmental measures, and Factor 2 was weighted for lead loading of house dust. The geometric mean blood lead level was 4.9 microg/dL; 14% exceeded 10 microg/dL. Many of the children were iron deficient (24% with ferritin < 12 ng/dL). Seventeen percent of soil leads exceeded 500 microg/g, and 23% and 63% of interior and exterior paint samples exceeded 5,000 microg/g. The unadjusted geometric mean blood lead level for iron-deficient children was higher by 1 microg/dL; this difference was greater (1.8 microg/dL) after excluding Asians. Blood lead levels were higher for iron-deficient children for each tertile of exposure as estimated by Factors 1 and 2 for non-Asian children. Elevated blood lead among iron-deficient children persisted after adjusting for potential confounders by multivariate regression; the largest difference in blood lead levels between iron-deficient and -replete children, approximately 3 microg/dL, was among those living in the most contaminated environments. Asian children had a paradoxical association of sufficient iron status and higher blood lead level, which warrants further investigation. Improving iron status, along with reducing exposures, may help reduce blood lead levels among most children, especially those living in the most contaminated environments.
缺铁会增加儿童铅暴露的证据主要基于动物数据和有限的人体研究,且其中一些证据相互矛盾。尚无关于儿童铁状态和血铅水平的研究考虑到环境铅污染及其暴露源。因此,尚无研究直接确定缺铁是否会改变环境铅与血铅之间的关系。在本研究中,我们比较了生活在低、中或高污染环境中的缺铁儿童和铁充足儿童的血铅水平。收集了319名1至5岁儿童的油漆、土壤、灰尘和血液中的铅含量、房屋使用年限以及铁状态数据。我们制定了两个铅暴露因子来总结相关的暴露变量:因子1总结了所有环境测量值,因子2根据房屋灰尘中的铅含量进行加权。血铅水平的几何平均值为4.9微克/分升;14%的儿童血铅水平超过10微克/分升。许多儿童缺铁(24%的儿童铁蛋白<12纳克/分升)。17%的土壤铅含量超过500微克/克,23%和63%的室内和室外油漆样本铅含量超过5000微克/克。缺铁儿童未经调整的血铅水平几何平均值高1微克/分升;排除亚洲儿童后,这一差异更大(1.8微克/分升)。根据因子1和因子2估算,非亚洲儿童中,缺铁儿童在每个暴露三分位数中的血铅水平都更高。通过多变量回归对潜在混杂因素进行调整后,缺铁儿童的血铅水平仍然较高;缺铁儿童和铁充足儿童之间血铅水平的最大差异约为3微克/分升,出现在生活在污染最严重环境中的儿童中。亚洲儿童存在铁状态充足但血铅水平较高的矛盾关联,这值得进一步研究。改善铁状态以及减少暴露,可能有助于降低大多数儿童的血铅水平,尤其是那些生活在污染最严重环境中的儿童。