Rastogi Shantanu, Nandlike Kiran, Fenster William
Department of Pediatrics, Maimonides Medical Center, Brooklyn, NY 11219, USA.
J Perinat Med. 2007;35(6):492-6. doi: 10.1515/JPM.2007.131.
There has been a significant decrease in the number of preschool children with elevated blood lead levels (BLL), from 88.2 to 4.4 per 10,000 children over the last three decades as shown by National Health and Nutritional Examination Survey (NHANES) data. However, there are still certain high-risk populations that have not been well studied. One such group is that of pregnant women. During pregnancy, BLL tends to increase due to greater bone turnover, which causes release of lead stored in bone. This increase may not affect the pregnant woman's health directly but could be extremely harmful to the rapidly developing central nervous system in the fetus as it crosses the placenta easily. This current study was undertaken to estimate the prevalence of elevated BLL in pregnant women in a community hospital, monitor the effect of routine preventive practices on maternal BLL, and to elucidate the relationship between maternal and neonatal BLL and their anthropometric indices. A retrospective chart review was conducted on all hospital deliveries occurring in the first six years after the initiation of universal blood lead screening of pregnant women (n=6880). The prevalence of elevated lead (> or =10 microg/dL) in our patient population was 1.7%. The factors associated with elevated lead levels were recent immigration to the US, poor socioeconomic status and low educational levels. Simple interventions such as hand washing as well as calcium and iron supplementation significantly reduced maternal BLL from 16.82+/-9.5 to 11.48+/-9.3 microg/dL (P<0.0001). A significant correlation (r=0.4, P<0.007) is present between the post-intervention but not the pre-intervention maternal BLL and the neonatal BLL. Given the vulnerability of the developing fetal brain and that CNS complications are associated with elevated lead levels, antenatal lead screening should be part of routine prenatal care. Simple preventive measures may play a role in decreasing maternal BLL and thereby decreasing transplacental transfer of lead to the fetus.
根据美国国家健康与营养检查调查(NHANES)数据显示,在过去三十年中,血铅水平(BLL)升高的学龄前儿童数量显著下降,从每万名儿童中的88.2例降至4.4例。然而,仍有一些高危人群尚未得到充分研究。孕妇群体就是其中之一。在怀孕期间,由于骨转换增加,导致储存于骨骼中的铅释放,血铅水平往往会升高。这种升高可能不会直接影响孕妇健康,但由于铅很容易穿过胎盘,可能会对快速发育的胎儿中枢神经系统造成极大危害。本研究旨在估算一家社区医院中孕妇血铅水平升高的患病率,监测常规预防措施对孕妇血铅水平的影响,并阐明孕妇和新生儿血铅水平与其人体测量指标之间的关系。对开展孕妇普遍血铅筛查后的头六年内所有医院分娩病例(n = 6880)进行了回顾性病历审查。我们的患者群体中血铅升高(≥10微克/分升)的患病率为1.7%。与血铅水平升高相关的因素包括近期移民至美国以及社会经济地位低下和教育水平低。诸如洗手以及补充钙和铁等简单干预措施显著降低了孕妇血铅水平,从16.82±9.5微克/分升降至11.