PEDIATRICS Vol. 78 No. 2 August 1986, pp. 257-262
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Blood Lead Levels and Dietary Calcium Intake in 1- to 11-Year-Old Children: The Second National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 1976 to 1980

Kathyrn R. Mahaffey PhD1, Peter S. Gartside PhD1, and Charles J. Glueck MD1

1 From the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health and the General Clinical Research Center, Lipid Research Center, the Division of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, and the General Clinical Research-CLINFO Centers, University of Cincinnati, College of Medicine, Cincinnati

Whether, and to what degree, dietary calcium is inversely associated with blood lead levels was examined in 2,926 black and white children, 1 to 11 years of age, from the Second National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES II). Blood lead levels were significantly higher in black than in white children, whereas white children had significantly higher dietary calcium intake (P < .0001). Using covariance analysis and multiple regression analysis, determinants of blood lead levels were assessed as follows. The dependent variable was log10 lead, with independent variables age, sex, race, height, Quetelet index, dietary intake of calcium, phosphorous, fat, carbohydrate, and calories, community size index, poverty index ratio, geographic region, urbanization index, and all two-way interactions of the preceding. In the multiple regression analysis, the following independent variables were significant, P < .05. Race (black) and sex (male) were positively associated with blood lead level (P < .0001 for both). The lower the family income and the more urban the family residence, the higher were the blood lead levels (P < .0001, < .008, respectively). A significant independent inverse association of blood lead levels with year of examination was noted, reflecting a downward secular trend in blood lead levels. Height was inversely associated with blood lead level (P < .0001). Dietary calcium intake was also inversely associated with blood lead level (P = .028). Dietary intake of phosphorous, fat, carbohydrate, and total calories were not significantly associated with blood lead levels. The most direct strategy for prevention of childhood lead poisoning involves primary prevention to reduce exposure. However, increasing calcium intake mihgt have value in secondary prevention of relative and absolute lead intoxication. We speculate that the NHANES II findings may be useful in identifying an avenue for secondary prevention of the effects of lead exposure by highlighting improved public health measures aimed at increasing intake of calcium and dairy products (when well tolerated), particularly in low-income black and white urban dwellers.

Key Words: blood lead level • dietary calcium intake

Accepted on December 16, 1985




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