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Rapid drop in infant blood lead levels during the transition to unleaded gasoline use in Santiago, Chile
Authors:Pino Paulina  Walter Tomás  Oyarzún Manuel J  Burden Matthew J  Lozoff Betsy
Affiliation:School of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine, University of Chile, Santiago, Chile. ppino@med.uchile.cl
Abstract:This study was conducted to relate blood lead levels in infants to changes in lead emissions in Santiago, Chile, a heavily polluted setting where leaded gasoline began to be replaced with unleaded gasoline in 1993. Over an 18-mo period, 422 infants had blood lead levels, cotinine, and iron status determined at 12 mo. Blood lead levels fell at an average rate of 0.5 microg/dl every 2 mo, from 8.3 to 5.9 microg/dl, as the city experienced a net fall of 30% in the quantity of leaded gasoline sold. Time progression, car ownership, serum cotinine, and type of housing were significantly associated with a blood lead level > or = 10 microg/dl. In this study, the authors demonstrated that infant blood lead levels, even if relatively low, can drop very rapidly in conjunction with decreases in environmental lead exposure.
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