Teruya K, Sakurai H, Omae K, Higashi T, Muto T, Kaneko Y
Department of Hygiene, School of Medicine, Kyorin University, Tokyo, Japan.
Int Arch Occup Environ Health. 1991;62(8):549-53. doi: 10.1007/BF00381107.
A cross-sectional survey was performed on 172 male, lead exposed workers to clarify the effects of lead on the cardiac autonomic nervous system expressed as the decrease of R-R interval variation on an electrocardiogram and to obviate the dose-effect relationship between blood-lead level (Pb-B) and the degree of the decrease. For 132 workers who were exposed to lead for more than one year and whose Pb-B levels were relatively stable (Pb-B variation less than 20 micrograms/dl during recent one year), a significant dose-related decrease of R-R interval variation during deep breathing was observed. Age-adjusted R-R interval variation during deep breathing in those whose Pb-B were 30 micrograms/dl or above was significantly decreased compared with those whose Pb-B levels were 20 micrograms/dl or below. This decrease was observed more clearly in younger workers. These results suggest that an effect on autonomic nervous system expressed as decrease of R-R interval variation during deep breathing might be one of the earliest effects of lead exposure.