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Published in: Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine 1/2012

01-01-2012 | Regular Article

Blood lead levels of contemporary Japanese children

Authors: Jun Yoshinaga, Mai Takagi, Kumiko Yamasaki, Sayaka Tamiya, Chiho Watanabe, Masayuki Kaji

Published in: Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine | Issue 1/2012

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Abstract

Objectives

Lead concentrations in whole blood (BPb) of Japanese children were measured to obtain insight into the sources of variation and to estimate health risk.

Methods

Blood samples were taken from 352 children (aged 1–14 years) at pediatric clinics/hospitals in 3 regions of Japan (Tokyo, Shizuoka, and Osaka) during 2005–2006 (Shizuoka only) and 2008–2010 (3 regions), and BPb was measured by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry after acid digestion.

Results

Geometric mean BPb of the 352 children was 1.07 μg/dL, among the lowest in the world. Based on this result, the probability of exceeding BPb 10 μg/dL, the action level proposed by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, in general Japanese children was estimated to be negligible. There was a significant negative correlation between BPb and age, while sex difference was not significant. BPb was significantly lower in subjects in Tokyo than in the other two regions. Age-adjusted mean BPb was significantly higher in children with a family member who smoked in their presence than in those who did not have such a family member, indicating that passive smoking had a significant effect on BPb.

Conclusions

Health risk of lead exposure is minimal in Japanese children. To lower the exposure level further, reduction of passive smoking is suggested as one of the effective measures.
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Metadata
Title
Blood lead levels of contemporary Japanese children
Authors
Jun Yoshinaga
Mai Takagi
Kumiko Yamasaki
Sayaka Tamiya
Chiho Watanabe
Masayuki Kaji
Publication date
01-01-2012
Publisher
Springer Japan
Published in
Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine / Issue 1/2012
Print ISSN: 1342-078X
Electronic ISSN: 1347-4715
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12199-011-0216-z

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