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Deficits in Psychologic and Classroom Performance of Children with Elevated Dentine Lead Levels

List of authors.
  • Herbert L. Needleman, M.D.,
  • Charles Gunnoe, ED.D.,
  • Alan Leviton, M.D.,
  • Robert Reed, Ph.D.,
  • Henry Peresie, Ph.D.,
  • Cornelius Maher, Ph.D.,
  • and Peter Barrett, B.S.

Abstract

To measure the neuropsychologic effects of unidentified childhood exposure to lead, the performance of 58 children with high and 100 with low dentine lead levels was compared. Children with high lead levels scored significantly less well on the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (Revised) than those with low lead levels. This difference was also apparent on verbal subtests, on three other measures of auditory or speech processing and on a measure of attention. Analysis of variance showed that none of these differences could be explained by any of the 39 other variables studied.

Also evaluated by a teachers' questionnaire was the classroom behavior of all children (2146 in number) whose teeth were analyzed. The frequency of non-adaptive classroom behavior increased in a dose-related fashion to dentine lead level. Lead exposure, at doses below those producing symptoms severe enough to be diagnosed clinically, appears to be associated with neuropsychologic deficits that may interfere with classroom performance. (N Engl J Med 300:689–695, 1979)

Funding and Disclosures

The results of this study were reported in part at the Society for Pediatric Research, New York, NY, April 27, 1978.

Supported by a program project grant (HD-08945) from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.

We are indebted to Janice Adams, Margaret Nichols and Ruth Barrett, who performed the psychological tests, and to Lee Davidowski and Hamdi Maksoud, who analyzed the dentine specimens, to the teachers, principals and nurses of Somerville and Chelsea, Massachusetts, and to the late Dr. James Bryant, of the Somerville Board of Health, for help in the early days of the study.

Author Affiliations

From the Mental Retardation Research Center of the Children's Hospital Medical Center and Harvard Medical School (address reprint requests to Dr. Needleman at the Children's Hospital Medical Center, 300 Longwood Ave., Boston, MA 02115).

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