| Results of Lead Research: Prenatal Exposure and Neurological Consequences Robert A. Goyer National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, Research Triangle Park, NC 27709 USA. Abstract The history of advances in the understanding of the toxic effects of lead over the past 20 years is an outstanding example of how knowledge learned from research can impact public health. Measures that have had the greatest impact on reducing exposure to lead are reduction of lead from gasoline, elimination of lead solder from canned food, removal of lead from paint, and abatement of housing containing lead-based paint. Nevertheless, continuing factors that enhance risk to lead exposure, particularly during fetal life, are low socioeconomic status, old housing with lead-containing paint, and less than ideal nutrition, particularly low dietary intake of calcium, iron, and zinc. Prenatal exposure may result from endogenous sources such as lead in the maternal skeletal system or maternal exposures from diet and the environment. Experimental studies have shown that the developing nervous system is particularly sensitive to the toxic effects of lead and that a large number of the effects in the nervous system are due to interference of lead with biochemical functions dependent on calcium ions and impairment of neuronal connections dependent on dendritic pruning. There is need for more study to determine whether these effects are a continuum of prenatal lead exposure or whether prenatal exposure to lead produces unique effects. Key words: blood lead levels, fetal brain, fetal susceptibility, lead, mechanisms of central nervous system effects, neurological effects, pregnancy, prenatal exposure, risk factors. Environ Health Perspect 104:1050-1054 (1996) Address correspondence to: R. A. Goyer, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, PO Box 12233, Research Triangle Park, NC 27709 USA. Adapted from presentations at the annual meeting of the American Industrial Hygiene Association, Kansas City, 25 May 1995, and the Vth COMTOX Symposium on Toxicology and Chemistry of Metals, Vancouver, British Columbia, 10-13 July 1995. Received 11 March 1996 ; accepted 4 June 1996. The full version of this article is available for free in HTML format. |