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Lead-induced anemia: Dose-response relationships and evidence for a threshold

J. Schwartz, P.J. Landrigan, E.L. Baker , W.A. Orenstein and I.H. Von Lindern

American Journal of Public Health, 1990, vol. 80, issue 2, 165-168

Abstract: We conducted a cross-sectional epidemiologic study to assess the association between blood lead level and hematocrit in 579 one to five year-old children living near a primary lead smelter in 1974. Blood lead levels ranged from 0.53 to 7.91 μmol/L (11 to 164 μg/dl). To predict hematocrit as a function of blood lead level and age, we derived non-linear regession models and fit percentile curves. We used logistic regression to predict the probability of hematocrit values less than 35 percent. We found a strong non-linear, dose-response relationship between blood lead level and hematocrit. This relationship was influenced by age, but (in this age group) not by sex; the effect was strongest in youngest children. In one year-olds, the age group most severely affected, the risk of an hematocrit value below 35 percent was 2 percent above background at blood lead levels between 0.97 and 1.88 μmol/L (20 and 39 μg/dl), 18 percent above background at lead levels of 1.93 to 2.85 μmol/L (40 to 59 μg/dl), and 40 percent above background at lead levels 2.9 μmol/L (60 μg/dl) and greater; background was defined as a blood lead level below 1.88 μmol/L (20 μg/dl). This effect appeared independent of iron deficiency. These findings suggest that blood lead levels close to the currently recommended limit value of 1.21 μmol/L (25 μg/dl) are associated with dose-related depression of hematocrit in young children.

Date: 1990
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