Blood lead levels of children with pica and surma use.
Indian J Pediatr
; 1991 Jul-Aug; 58(4): 513-9
Article
in En
| IMSEAR
| ID: sea-79475
Blood lead levels of 253 Delhi children were estimated by dithizone method. In 82 (controls) children with no symptoms mean blood lead level was 9.6 micrograms/dl (+/- SD 6.8: median 10 micrograms); only 6 had high levels between 30-33 micrograms/dl. In 88 children with pica, the mean blood lead level was 23.0 micrograms/dl (+/- SD 13.82; median 17 micrograms) which was significantly higher than the control; 26 had high levels between 30-92 micrograms/dl. Sixteen children with pica and surma-use and 46 children suspected of lead poisoning showed lead level patterns like the pica group. However, 21 surma-using children without pica resembled the control group. Children with pica were significantly more anemic than the controls and showed higher prevalence of abdominal-neurological symptoms. Because, in India, blood lead cannot be estimated in most of the hospitals, it is suggested that children with severe pica, anemia, abdominal-neurological symptoms and exposure to surma or lead, be suspected of lead poisoning, kept in lead-free environment with corrected nutrition, and be given a short cautious therapeutic trial with oral penicillamine.
Full text:
1
Index:
IMSEAR
Main subject:
Female
/
Humans
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Male
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Pica
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Child
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Child, Preschool
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Adolescent
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Cosmetics
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Infant
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Anemia
Language:
En
Journal:
Indian J Pediatr
Year:
1991
Type:
Article