Ann Occup Environ Med.  2017 ;29(1):26. 10.1186/s40557-017-0179-7.

Levels of blood lead and urinary cadmium in industrial complex residents in Ulsan

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Ulsan University Hospital, University of Ulsan College of Medicine, 877, Bangeojinsunhwando-ro, Dong-gu, Ulsan, 44033 Republic of Korea. zzz0202@naver.com.

Abstract

BACKGROUND
Populations neighboring industrial complexes are at an increased health risk, due to constant exposure to various potentially hazardous compounds released during industrial production activity. Although there are many previous studies that focus on occupational exposure to heavy metals, studies that focused on environmental exposure to lead and cadmium are relatively rare. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the extent of the environmental exposure of heavy metals in residents of industrial area.
METHODS
Four areas in close proximity to the Ulsan petrochemical industrial complex and the Onsan national industrial complex were selected to be included in the exposure group, and an area remotely located from these industrial complexes was selected as the non-exposure group. Among the residents of our study areas, a total of 1573 subjects aged 20 years and older were selected and all study subjects completed a written questionnaire. Blood and urine samples were obtained from about one third of the subjects (465 subjects) who provided informed consent for biological sample collection. Total 429 subjects (320 subjects from exposure area, 109 subjects from non-exposure area) were included in final analysis.
RESULTS
The geometric mean blood lead level among the subjects in the exposed group was 2.449 Î¼g/dL, which was significantly higher than the non-exposure group's level of 2.172 Î¼g/dL. Similarly, the geometric mean urine cadmium levels between the two groups differed significantly, at 1.077 Î¼g/g Cr. for the exposed group, and 0.709 Î¼g/g Cr. for the non-exposure group. In a multiple linear regression analysis to determine the relationship between blood lead level and related factors, the results showed that blood lead level had a significant positive correlation with age, the male, exposure area, and non-drinkers. In the same way, urine cadmium level was positively correlated with age, the female, exposure area, and smokers.
CONCLUSIONS
This study found that blood lead levels and urine cadmium levels were significantly higher among the residents of industrial areas than among the non-exposure area residents, which is thought to be due to the difference in environmental exposure of lead and cadmium. Furthermore, it was clear that at a low level of exposure, differences in blood lead or urine cadmium levels based on age, gender, and smoking status were greater than the differences based on area of residence. Therefore, when evaluating heavy metal levels in the body at a low level of exposure, age, gender, and smoking status must be adjusted, as they are significant confounding factors.

Keyword

Industrial complex; Environmental exposure; Lead; Cadmium

MeSH Terms

Cadmium*
Environmental Exposure
Female
Humans
Informed Consent
Linear Models
Male
Metals, Heavy
Occupational Exposure
Smoke
Smoking
Ulsan*
Cadmium
Metals, Heavy
Smoke
Full Text Links
  • AOEM
Actions
Cited
CITED
export Copy
Close
Share
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
Similar articles
Copyright © 2024 by Korean Association of Medical Journal Editors. All rights reserved.     E-mail: koreamed@kamje.or.kr