Industrialization

Industrialization: Metals
Annual worldwide production of metals has increased dramatically as a result of the industrial revolution
“More metal and mineral products have been used in the past 50 years than were  used in the entire previous history of the world.”

NPL Sites
From epa.gov: “Years ago, people were less aware of how dumping chemical wastes might affect public health and the environment. On thousands of properties where such practices were intensive or continuous, the result was uncontrolled or abandoned hazardous waste sites, such as abandoned warehouses and landfills.”
The superfund was created by taxing industry to pay for the clean up of abandoned sites

Occupational hazards of industrialization
Mining
Accidents
Government safety inspections
Black Lung
Disease risk due to high exposure
As a result, much was learned about metal toxicity syndromes
Which leads to the question: What are the effects of exposure at non-occupational (generally lower) levels?

Lead-history
Toxic effects have been known for centuries
Paint known to be a poison in household paint as far back as late 1800’s
Seven countries band lead paint in 1922
1920s: added to gasoline (tetraethyl lead)
Industry fought public health efforts to cease the ubiquitous use of lead

Lead in the body
Measuring
Methods: blood levels, x-ray refraction (bone)
Appropriate biological sampling:
bone, blood: long term
Urine: short term only
High dose (>80µg/dl):
Affects blood-brain barrier, leading to increased intracranial pressure (lead encephalopathy)
Seizure, mental retardation, death
Low dose: impaired cognitive function
Current limit in US is 10 µg/dl

Treatment
Chelation therapy
Prevent death in children with encephalopathy from large exposure levels
Do not restore lost cognitive function in those exposed to lower levels
No treatment for the effects of low level exposures
Defining safe levels
Is there a threshold?

Studies on health effects of lead exposure
Needleman
Dentine lead and classroom behavior
Yugoslavia
Mother-child interaction
Cord blood lead/maternal blood lead
Blood lead:bone lead levels, a good correlation

Public health triumph or failure?
Major sources of exposure were finally eliminated
But why?
And who is exposed to the paint that remains in older housing stock?
No longer used in gasoline only because of catalytic converters
Why did recognition of the problem take so long?