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Childhood
Lead Exposure Causes Permanent Brain Damage
Tuesday, December 1, 2009
A study using
functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to evaluate brain
function revealed that adults who were exposed to lead as
children incur permanent brain injury. The results were presented
today at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North
America (RSNA).
"What we have found is that no region
of the brain is spared from lead exposure," said the study's
lead author, Kim Cecil, PhD, imaging scientist at Cincinnati
Children's Hospital Medical Center and professor of radiology
and pediatrics at the University of Cincinnati College of
Medicine. "Distinct areas of the brain are affected
differently."
The study is part of a large research
project called the Cincinnati Lead Study, a long-term lead
exposure study conducted through the Cincinnati Children's
Environmental Health Center, a collaborative research group
funded by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. The Cincinnati Lead
Study followed prenatal and early childhood lead exposure of 376
infants from high-risk areas of Cincinnati between 1979 and 1987.
Over the course of the project, the children underwent behavioral
testing and 23 blood analyses that yielded a mean blood lead
level.
Lead, a common and potent poison found in water,
soil and lead-based paint, is especially toxic to children's
rapidly developing nervous systems. Homes built before 1950 are
most likely to contain lead-based paint, which can chip and be
ingested by children.
"Lead exposure has been
associated with diminished IQ, poor academic performance,
inability to focus and increased risk of criminal behavior,"
Cecil said.
Cecil's study involved 33 adults who were
enrolled as infants in the Cincinnati Lead Study. The mean age of
the study participants, which included 14 women and 19 men, was
21 years. The participants' mean blood lead levels ranged from 5
to 37 micrograms per deciliter with a mean of 14. Participant
histories showed IQ deficiencies, juvenile delinquency and a
number of criminal arrests.
Each participant underwent
fMRI while performing two tasks to measure the brain's executive
functioning, which governs attention, decision making and impulse
control. The imaging revealed that in order to complete a task
that required inhibition, those with increased blood lead levels
required activation from additional regions within the frontal
and parietal lobes of the brain.
"This tells us that
the area of the brain responsible for inhibition is damaged by
lead exposure and that other regions of the brain must compensate
in order for an individual to perform," Cecil said.
"However, the compensation is not sufficient."
Imaging
performed during a second task designed to test attention
revealed an association between higher lead levels and decreased
activation in the parietal region and other areas of the brain.
According to Cecil, the brain's white matter, which
organizes and matures at an early age, adapts to lead exposure,
while the frontal lobe, which is the last part of the brain to
develop, incurs multiple insults from lead exposure as it
matures.
"Many people think that once lead blood
levels decrease, the effects should be reversible, but, in fact,
lead exposure has harmful and lasting effects," she
said.
Cecil believes that these findings lend
support to previous reports from the Cincinnati Lead Study
showing that the lasting neurological effect of lead exposure,
rather than a poor social environment, is a key contributor to
the subsequent cognitive and behavior problems in this
group.
Co-authors are University of Cincinnati colleagues
Kim Dietrich, PhD., Caleb Adler, MD, James Eliassen, PhD, and
Bruce Lanphear, MD.
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