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Lead is so common because it has been such a useful metal in many ways -- easy to work with simple tools, handy, and cheap.
Lead is also very dangerous.
WHY IS LEAD DANGEROUS?
Lead in the body is dangerous because it interferes
with normal body functions. It can change the way the blood-forming
cells work, alter the way nerve cells signal each other, and lead
can disturb or destroy the way the brain makes connections for
thinking.
WHO IS THREATENED BY LEAD?
Workers exposed to high levels of lead are in danger.
They need to be very careful to protect themselves from lead fumes
and dust.
Infants, children, and pregnant women, because of
their unborn child, are threatened by even small amounts of lead
in their environment.
Because children are still developing, the potential damage to their development from lead exposure is very important to their future health and well-being.
Too much lead in the body can seriously injure the
brain, nervous system, red blood cells, and the kidneys.
Higher levels of lead in the body can cause mental
retardation, fits (convulsions), falling out (unconsciousness,
coma), and even death. In years past, that kind of effect was
called lead poisoning. Exposures high enough to cause coma and
death are very uncommon today, but they haven't disappeared.
WHAT IS LEAD TOXICITY?
Low levels of lead in the body when a child's brain
is developing can slow the child's development and cause learning
and behavior problems.
Lead-exposed children may not be as quick at their studies or as good at hitting a baseball or dribbling a basketball as children without the lead exposures.
WHERE'S THE RISK?
Though lead paint stopped being used on most houses
in the mid-1970s, many older homes still have surfaces once painted
with lead paint. Young children eat, chew, and suck on lead-painted
surfaces they can reach, like window sills and railings. The little
ones will put jewelry and printed matter that may have lead in
their mouths.
Dirt and dust sometimes have lead in them, as do
the fumes and dust stirred up during home renovation and while
sandblasting lead-painted buildings and bridges.
Older homes and especially deteriorating and poorly kept older homes can be a threat for children. Particular jobs, like welding, radiator repair, making lead batteries, and demolition work can be especially hazardous to workers.
HOW DOES RISK BECOME THREAT?
Lead accumulates in our environment. As we keep using
more lead, there will be more lead in the environment.
Lead accumulates in our bodies, and especially in
children's bodies. Exposure to small amounts of lead over time
can mean a long-term accumulation of lead in a child, raising
the child's risk of bad health effects.
Pregnant women who have lead stored in their bones may release some of that bone lead into their K blood, where it can reach the womb and fetus during pregnancy. That kind of transfer potential makes us think about lead exposures in today's children and what that may mean for their children.
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The National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
(NIEHS), one of the National Institutes of Health, has been studying
the health effects of lead for more than 20 years. Information
from these studies supported the move to get lead out of gasoline,
contributing to cleaner air.
Today, NlEHS-supported scientists and doctors are
looking into just how low levels of lead injure people, and what
the most effective treatment may be, particularly for lead-poisoned
children. These scientists are asking whether the effects of lead
can be reversed or prevented once exposure occurs.
The Federal Government has undertaken a broad range
of education and prevention efforts. The Centers for Disease Control
is one of the leaders in the community public health effort; the
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences is doing much
of the needed research to make the public health effort work.
The purpose of all these efforts is to reduce the number of people
injured by lead.
WHAT CAN I DO TO PROTECT MY CHILD AND FAMILY?
Know what and where the lead is in your environment.
Ask your community health department about lead in
your tap water for drinking and cooking. If the health department
thinks there's reason to be concerned, have your water tested.
Meanwhile, if your house is fairly new but was built before 1986, before the
ban on lead solder for water pipes, flush the water lines by opening
the spigot for a minute or two before drawing water for morning coffee or cooking or drinking.
If your house is more than 15 years old, it may have
once had lead-based paint on it. Ask your community health department
how to test the surfaces a child can reach to see if there's lead
in paint there. Seal sound surfaces with fresh paint.
If you need to repair or remove lead-painted surfaces,
get a professional who is trained to do the work safely. Keep your child away from
the area during the work and if you're pregnant, stay away, too.
The area
should be wet mopped by the removal workers often during the job, using a phosphate cleaner. Check with
your local health department for information on how to have the
leaded paint removed safely.
If you have any doubts about your child's possible
exposure to lead, see the doctor and ask whether your child should
be tested.
Your child's doctor knows how to get the test done
and the doctor can tell you what you need to do, if anything, when the test comes
back.
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| Contact: WebCenter (webcenter@niehs.nih.gov) Page created: 27 Jan 98 Last Modified 13 April 2000 Disclaimer |
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