Publication | Closed Access
Environmental Lead Contamination and Pediatric Lead Intoxication an Andean Ecuadorian Village
35
Citations
29
References
2000
Year
EngineeringAndean Ecuadorian VillageEnvironmental Lead ContaminationLead IdentificationPediatric Lead IntoxicationLead PoisoningEnvironmental ChemistryEnvironmental HealthSoil PollutionEnvironmental LeadToxicologyPublic HealthPediatric ToxicologyPb GlazingChemical HazardPoisoningSoil ContaminationEcotoxicologyVillage SoilForensic ToxicologyPediatricsEnvironmental RemediationMetal ToxicityEnvironmental ToxicologyPediatric Environmental Health
Environmental lead (Pb) contamination was measured in samples of soil and locally grown food produce in a remote Ecuadorian village where Pb glazing of ceramics is the local cottage industry. The Pb concentration levels of local soil samples collected at varying distances from a cluster of backyard Pb baking kilns were 29,213 ppm (microg/g) at 0.001 km, 172 ppm at 0.005 km, 81 ppm at 0.01 km, 55 ppm at 1 km, 19 ppm at 2 km, and 1.4 ppm at 6 km, significantly higher than levels in control soil samples from non-Pb-glazing reference areas. Samples of locally grown food produce were also found to be Pb contaminated. Venous blood samples from 166 schoolchildren (ages 4 months to 15 years) in the study area and 56 children in the reference area showed mean blood lead levels of 40.0 microg/dl (SD: 24.5; range: 6.2. - 119.1 microg/dL) and 6.6 microg/dL (SD: 3.4; range: 1.9 - 18.1 microg/dL), respectively, which were significantly different (p = 0.0001). The Pb levels in milk from breastfeeding mothers ranged from 1.44 to 39 ng/g. Lead isotope ratios of the children's blood and of samples of village soil revealed a common Pb source or "fingerprint."
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