Risk assessment of renal dysfunction caused by occupational lead exposure.
- Author:
Li-ting TIAN
1
;
Li-jian LEI
;
Xiu-li CHANG
;
Tai-yi JIN
;
Guang ZHENG
;
Wei-jun GUO
;
Hui-qi LI
;
Xiao-hai PAN
Author Information
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- MeSH: Adolescent; Adult; Biomarkers; blood; urine; Environmental Monitoring; Female; Humans; Kidney; drug effects; Kidney Diseases; chemically induced; Lead; blood; urine; Male; Middle Aged; Occupational Exposure; Risk Assessment; Surveys and Questionnaires; Young Adult
- From: Chinese Journal of Industrial Hygiene and Occupational Diseases 2010;28(3):170-174
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
OBJECTIVETo assess the risk of renal dysfunction caused by occupational lead exposure through epidemiological investigation.
METHODSThe workers in a battery factory were selected as the subjects for the exposure and effect assessment. The occupational environmental monitoring data was collected and used to calculate the total external dose of lead. The relationship between external dose and internal dose of lead was analyzed. The external dose, blood lead (BPb) and urinary lead (UPb) were used as exposure biomarkers while the urinary N-acetyl-D-glucosaminidase (UNAG), and urinary albumin (UALB) were used as the effect biomarkers for the renal dysfunction caused by lead. Software of BMDS (BMDS 11311) was used to calculate BMD.
RESULTSThe external and internal does of lead was positively correlated (BPb: r = 0.466, P < 0.01; UPb: r = 0.383, P < 0.01). The levels of BPb, UPb in exposure group (654.03 microg/L, 143.45 microg/g Cr) were significantly higher than those in the control group (57.12 microg/L, 7.20 microg/g Cr), so were UALB, UNAG; in addition, all of them presented significant dose-response relationship. The BPb BMD of UALB, UNAG were 607.76, 362.56 microg/L respectively and the UPb BMD of UALB, UNAG were 117.79, 78.79 microg/gCr respectively.
CONCLUSIONOccupational lead exposure can cause renal dysfunction, which presents dose-response relationship; the risk assessment of renal dysfunction caused by occupational lead exposure is performed by BMD calculation of BPb and UPb.