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LEAD POISONING

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... Ca Lead poisoning Storage & Distribution Rapid ... 50 mg/g lead i.e. 5.0 % 39 mg/g mercury i.e. 3.9 % i.e. 8.9 % heavy metals Blood ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: LEAD POISONING


1
LEAD POISONING
2
Lead poisoningAbsorption
  • Skin
  • little/no absorption
  • Inhalation (lt1µm)
  • dust or lead fumes
  • absorb 50-70
  • Oral
  • adults absorb 10
  • children absorb 40-50
  • increased absorption if low Fe, Ca

3
Lead poisoningStorage Distribution
  • Rapid turnover soft tissue pool
  • T1/2 30-40 days blood, liver, kidney, CNS
  • Slow turnover skeletal pool
  • T1/2 10-20 years 75 - 90 in skeletal pool
  • Chronic exposure results in a steady state
    distribution between bone and blood
  • Excretion Renal (90) and biliary (10)
  • Maximum excretion is 3.5µg/kg/day
  • If intake gt 3.5 µg/kg/day accumulation will occur

4
Lead poisoningSources
  • Occupational
  • Lead smelters
  • Painter/decorators
  • Battery manufacturers
  • Stain-glass workers
  • Jewellery makers
  • Bronze workers etc...
  • Environmental
  • paint (walls, furniture, toys)
  • water
  • food
  • air (petrol, industry), dust/soil
  • Other
  • traditional remedies (Ayruvedic)
  • surma kohl cosmetics
  • lead shot
  • lead glazed ceramics
  • foreign body ingestion
  • e.g. curtain/fishing weight, snooker chalk

5
Environmental lead exposureWater
  • Lead in water
  • Largely from lead pipes/solderings/fittings
  • Water lead contamination from ground lead has
    occurred in Nepal
  • WHO max water lead content 10µg/l
  • 20-30 UK homes exceed this limit

6
Environmental lead exposurePaint
  • Pre 1960s up to 40 lead in paint
  • rapid drying, weather resistance, colouring
  • Domestic paint now lt0.06 lead (600ppm)
  • BUT leaded paint remains in many homes
  • walls, furniture, toys
  • Lead exposure from paint
  • sanding, heat stripping, flaking, pica
  • contamination of carpets/curtains, dust

7
Ayurvedic Traditional Remedies
  • Numerous reports of lead, mercury, thallium,
    arsenic poisoning from Ayurvedic ( Chinese)
    remedies
  • 40 of the gt6000 medicines in Ayurveda contain at
    least one heavy metal
  • Thought by practitioners to have therapeutic
    properties and/or to increase the efficacy of
    other herbal contents
  • Used most commonly for chronic disorders and so
    there is a greater risk of heavy metal
    accumulation

8
Ayurvedic Traditional Remedies
  • Case 1 68 mg/g lead i.e. 6.8
  • 76 mg/g mercury i.e. 7.6
  • 12 mg/g arsenic i.e. 1.2
  • i.e. 15.5 heavy metals
  • Case 2 50 mg/g lead i.e. 5.0
  • 39 mg/g mercury i.e. 3.9
  • i.e. 8.9 heavy metals

9
Clinical features of lead poisoning
  • Results in variable effects on many systems
  • The effects are well established at high levels
  • Infants/children get symptoms at lower levels
  • Treatable, but can cause chronic sequelae

10
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11
Low level lead poisoning and childrens IQ
  • There have been many studies
  • 5 prospective, 14 cross-sectional
  • The problem is allowing for multiple confounders
  • Three published metanalyses
  • ?100µg/l blood lead
  • ? ? IQ 2.5 points

12
Diagnosis of Lead Poisoning
  • Blood lead is the best test (normal lt100µg/l)
  • Other bloods
  • FBC (film), UE, LFT, Ca, Vit D, Ferritin
  • Radiology
  • AXR ?lead in gut
  • Long bone XR in children
  • Other tests much less reliable
  • Urine lead - variable, more useful for organic
    lead
  • RBC Zn protoporphyrin, Urine coproporphyrin, dALA

13
Management of Lead Poisoning
  • IDENTIFY REMOVE from SOURCE
  • Treat coexisting iron ( calcium) deficiency
  • Consider the use of chelation therapy
  • - Good data for benefit with blood lead gt450µg/l
    (children)

14
Chelating agents for lead poisoning
  • 1. EDTA - Sodium calcium edetate
  • 2. DMSA - Dimercaptosuccinic acid
  • 3. BAL - Dimercaprol
  • - IM for severe toxicity only, particularly
    encephalopathy
  • 4. Penicillamine - no longer recommended

15
EDTA and DMSA
  • EDTA - Sodium Calcium Edetate
  • IV for severe toxicity, particularly
    encephalopathy
  • Well tolerated, lt1 nephrotoxicity
  • DMSA - 2,3dimercaptosuccinic acid
  • The oral agent of choice for lead poisoning
  • Given as a 19 day course
  • Well tolerated
  • The main problem is foul taste and smell !!

16
Treatment guidelines Children
  • 100-240µg/l Remove from source, repeat level 1
    month
  • 250-440µg/l Remove from source
  • DMSA only if persists at
    this level

450-690µg/l Remove from source DMSA
chelation gt700µg/l Remove from source
Urgent EDTA chelation (with
BAL if encephalopathy)
17
Treatment guidelines Adults
  • 100-400µg/l Remove from source (??)
  • Repeat level 3-6 mths
  • 400-500µg/l Remove from source (?)
  • Repeat level 1-2 mths

450-690µg/l Remove from source DMSA
chelation IF symptomatic gt700µg/l Remove
from source DMSA
chelation EDTA if neurological features
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