Workers
exposed to Lead show more Cognitive Problems
Later in Life
Newswise — Both the developing brain and the
aging brain can suffer from lead exposure.
For older people, a buildup of lead from
earlier exposure may be enough to result in
greater cognitive problems after age 55,
according to a follow-up study of adults
exposed to lead at work.
A full report appears in the January issue
of Neuropsychology, which is published by
the American Psychological Association.
From the Graduate School of Public Health
and the School of Medicine at the University
of Pittsburgh, the authors reported that
cognitive problems were linked to cumulative
exposure.
The researchers followed up on the 1982 Lead
Occupational Study, which assessed the
cognitive abilities of 288 lead-exposed and
181 non-exposed male workers in eastern
Pennsylvania.
The lead-exposed workers came from three
lead battery plants; the unexposed control
workers made truck chassis at a nearby
location.
At both points in time, all the workers were
given the Pittsburgh Occupational Exposures
Test battery, which includes measures of
five primary cognitive domains: psychomotor
speed, spatial function, executive function,
general intelligence, and learning and
memory.
In 1982, lead-exposed workers were found to
have an average blood lead level of 40
micrograms per deciliter (ug/dL), well above
normal.
Pennsylvania workers found to have 25 ug/dL
or more must be taken off the job. In 1982,
the unexposed workers had an average blood
level of 7.2, within normal limits.
In 2004, the current study followed up with
83 of the original lead-exposed workers and
51 of the original non-exposed workers.
Researchers measured current lead levels in
their blood and cumulative lead levels
through special X-rays of the tibia, or
lower leg bone (bone is the final repository
of circulating blood lead, where it has a
half life of about 30 years).
Researchers
also re-administered the test battery to
assess cognitive performance relative to
both measures of lead.
Among the lead-exposed workers, men with
higher cumulative lead had significantly
lower cognitive scores.
The clearest inverse relationships – when
one went up, the other went down – emerged
between cumulative lead and spatial ability,
learning and memory, and overall cognitive
score.
This linkage was more significant in the
older lead-exposed men, of at least age 55.
Their cognitive scores were significantly
different from those of younger lead-exposed
men even when the researchers controlled for
current blood levels of lead.
In other words, even when men no longer
worked at the battery plants, their earlier
prolonged exposure was enough to matter.
The mild deficits, although not clinically
significant, were consistent with other
studies that show previous exposure to lead
is, according to the authors, “particularly
detrimental to the aging brain and that
specific cognitive domains may be
particularly vulnerable.”
Scientists have been investigating how lead
damages the brain, especially the
hippocampus and frontal cortex, seats of
memory and learning. Lead exposure also puts
people at greater risk for high blood
pressure, which itself weakens cognition --
one possible pathway by which lead can cause
problems.
The men who built lead batteries were
exposed to it in the air and through their
skin. Other occupations, including
semiconductor fabrication, ceramics, welding
and soldering, and some construction work,
also may expose workers.
The authors wrote that, “Increased
prevention measures in work environments
will be necessary to reduce [lead exposure]
to zero and decrease risk of cognitive
decline.”
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