Researchers in Beijing have carried out a meta-analysis of AAS and ICP-MS results published during 1994-2004 to obtain a countrywide picture of how the level of lead in children’s blood is changing and how where they live effects their exposure to this toxic element.
Perhaps predictably, the team found that those children living in urban or industrial regions had much higher levels of lead than those living in rural areas. The figures they reviewed also contrast sharply with the children’s western counterparts who have much lower lead levels on average. The issue is a matter of significant public health importance for China, the researchers say.
Exposure to lead can affect the central nervous system and affect learning ability and growth. It is ubiquitous in the environment and can be absorbed in the human body by inhalation and ingestion from a variety of sources such as contaminated water, soil, food, lead-containing products such as paint and from vehicle exhausts in areas where tetra-ethyl lead is still used as engine an anti-knocking agent.
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