Skip to main content
U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Scientific and Technical Information

Environmental and take-home lead exposure in children living in the vicinity of a lead battery smelter in Serbia

Journal Article · · Environmental Research
 [1]; ;  [2];  [3];  [4];  [5];  [6];  [7];  [8];  [3]
  1. Innovation Centre of the Faculty for Technology and Metallurgy, University of Belgrade (Serbia)
  2. Department of Toxicology “Akademik Danilo Soldatović,” University of Belgrade - Faculty of Pharmacy (Serbia)
  3. Serbian Institute for Occupational Health “Dr. Dragomir Karajović”, Belgrade (Serbia)
  4. Clinic for Neurosurgery, Military Medical Academy, Belgrade (Serbia)
  5. Clinic for Hematology, Clinical Centre of Serbia, Belgrade (Serbia)
  6. Faculty for Technology and Metallurgy, University of Belgrade, Serbia and Academy of Engineering Sciences of Serbia (Serbia)
  7. Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc-Analytical Toxicology Laboratory, Brussels (Belgium)
  8. Clinic for Endocrinology, Clinical Centre of Serbia, Belgrade (Serbia)

Highlights: • Children living near a battery recycling plant had elevated blood lead levels (BLLs). • Children 0–6 years old living closest to the plant had the highest BLLs. • Higher lead exposure was found in children whose fathers worked in the plant. • The contribution of take-home lead exposure was between 25% and 40%. Blood lead levels (BLLs) have been falling steadily worldwide due to restricted use of lead (Pb) and its compounds. although they remain above preindustrial Pb levels. Elevated BLL can still be found in children living near secondary Pb smelters that represent around 50% of Pb production. There have been no studies on Pb exposure in children living in Serbia ever since the 1980s. The aim of this study was to evaluate the BLLs in children living in two villages in Serbia (Zajača, the location of a secondary lead smelter, and Paskovac, 5 km away), identify the primary determinants of children’s BLLs, and investigate the impact of BLLs on children’s health symptoms and school achievement. The study was conducted in 2011 on 127 children, aged 1–18 years, whose BLLs were measured using inductively coupled argon plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS). The median BLL in children was 12 μg/dl, with a significantly higher value of 17.5 μg/dl in Zajača, compared to 7.6 μg/dl in Paskovac. Only 1 out of 75 and 12 out of 52 children from Zajača and Paskovac, respectively, had BLLs below the CDC recommended 5 μg/dl level. Living near the smelter resulted in 19 times, and having a father who works in the plant 4 times higher odds of elevated BLLs. No significant effects of elevated BLLs health symptoms were seen in this study. BLLs of children living near a battery recycling plant in Serbia, an upper-middle income European country, were in the range and even higher than those of children living in developing countries. For the first time, the contribution of environmental and take-home lead exposure was quantified using mixed-effect modeling, and our results indicate a contribution of 25–40% of the take-home lead exposure to the BLLs of children living in the vicinity of a secondary lead smelter.

OSTI ID:
23095607
Journal Information:
Environmental Research, Journal Name: Environmental Research Vol. 167; ISSN ENVRAL; ISSN 0013-9351
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English

Similar Records

Blood lead and cadmium levels and relevant factors among children from an e-waste recycling town in China
Journal Article · Mon Sep 15 00:00:00 EDT 2008 · Environmental Research · OSTI ID:21130767

Hazards of deleading homes of children with lead poisoning
Journal Article · Wed Jul 01 00:00:00 EDT 1987 · Am. J. Dis. Child.; (United States) · OSTI ID:6470690

Lead intoxicated children in Kabwe, Zambia
Journal Article · Wed Aug 15 00:00:00 EDT 2018 · Environmental Research · OSTI ID:23110614