Lead poisoning

Lead poisoning
An environmental hazard capable of causing brain damage. In the US lead poisoning is formally defined as having at least 10 micrograms of lead per deciliter of blood. (The average level of lead, for people ages 1 to 70, is 2.3 micrograms.) The lead may come, for example, from lead-containing paint, leaded gasoline, etc. Lead was used in household paint until 1978 and was also found in leaded gasoline, some types of batteries, water pipes, and pottery glazes. Lead paint and pipes are still found in many older homes and lead is sometimes also found in water, food, household dust and soil. Lead can be a workplace hazard for people in certain occupations. Diagnosis is by blood test: Blood lead levels of 10 ug/dL or greater are dangerous to children, even if the person has no apparent symptoms. A diet that is high in iron and calcium can help protect people against absorbing lead. Treatment of lead poisoning is by chelation therapy, usually in the hospital. Treatment cannot repair damage to the brain done by lead poisoning, but may prevent further damage. If you think your home has high levels of lead: {{}}Have your children tested for lead, even if they seem healthy. Wash children's hands, bottles, pacifiers, and toys often. Make sure children eat healthy, low-fat foods. Get your home checked for lead hazards. Regularly clean floors, window sills, and other surfaces. Wipe soil off shoes before entering house. Talk to your landlord about fixing surfaces with peeling or chipping paint. Take precautions to avoid exposure to lead dust when remodeling or renovating. Don't use a belt-sander, propane torch, dry scraper, or dry sandpaper on painted surfaces that may contain lead. Don't try to remove lead-based paint yourself. Some Lead Information FACT: Lead exposure can harm young children and babies even before they are born. FACT: Even children that seem healthy can have high levels of lead in their bodies. FACT: People can get lead in their bodies by breathing or swallowing lead dust, or by eating soil or paint chips with lead in them. FACT: People have many options for reducing lead hazards. FACT: Removing lead-based paint improperly can increase the danger to your family. People can get more lead in their bodies if they: {{}}Put their hands or objects covered with lead dust in their mouths, Eat paint chips or soil that contains lead, or Breathe in lead dust (especially during renovations that disturb painted surfaces). Lead is even more dangerous to children than adults because: {{}}Babies and young children often put their hands and other objects in their mouths and these objects can have lead dust on them. Children's growing bodies absorb more lead. Children's developing brains and nervous systems are more sensitive to the damaging effects of lead.

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lead poisoning n chronic intoxication that is produced by the absorption of lead into the system and is characterized esp. by fatigue, abdominal pain, nausea, diarrhea, loss of appetite, anemia, a dark line along the gums, and muscular paralysis or weakness of limbs called also plumbism, saturnism

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poisoning due to the absorption or ingestion of lead or one of its salts. The symptoms include loss of appetite, weight loss, colic, constipation, insomnia, headache, dizziness, irritability, moderate hypertension, albuminuria, anemia, a blue line at the edge of the gums (lead line), encephalopathy (especially in children), and peripheral neuropathy leading to paralysis. Called also plumbism.

Medical dictionary. 2011.

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