Publication | Open Access
High lead exposure and auditory sensory-neural function in Andean children.
58
Citations
19
References
1997
Year
NeuropsychologySensory SystemsBlood LeadLead PoisoningEnvironmental HealthHigh Lead ExposureToxicologyAuditory SciencePb ExposureHealth SciencesAuditory ProcessingAudiologyAndean School ChildrenAuditory ResearchHuman HearingHearing LossNeurophysiologyPediatricsAuditory PhysiologyHearing PerceptionNeuroscienceMedicineAuditory SystemAuditory Neuroscience
We investigated blood lead (B-Pb) and mercury (B-Hg) levels and auditory sensory-neural function in 62 Andean school children living in a Pb-contaminated area of Ecuador and 14 children in a neighboring gold mining area with no known Pb exposure. The median B-Pb level for 62 children in the Pb-exposed group was 52.6 micrograms/dl (range 9.9-110.0 micrograms/dl) compared with 6.4 micrograms/dl (range 3.9-12.0 micrograms/dl) for the children in the non-Pb exposed group; the differences were statistically significant (p < 0.001). Auditory thresholds for the Pb-exposed group were normal at the pure tone frequencies of 0.25-8 kHz over the entire range of B-Pb levels, Auditory brain stem response tests in seven children with high B-Pb levels showed normal absolute peak and interpeak latencies. The median B-Hg levels were 0.16 micrograms/dl (range 0.04-0.58 micrograms/dl) for children in the Pb-exposed group and 0.22 micrograms/dl (range 0.1-0.44 micrograms/dl) for children in the non-Pb exposed gold mining area, and showed no significant relationship to auditory function.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1