Preview
Sign-in for full Details 
Sign-in free and Explore the Exciting World of BiomedExperts:
- Over 1.500.000 Profiles
- More than 1.800 Organizations worldwide
- State of the Art Network Visualizations
- Manage your own Profile
- Locate Experts in your Country/Region
- Locate Experts in your 1. and 2. Level Network
- Connect to Experts Worldwide
find experts for
Sign-in to see more
2006:
Lamadrid-Figueroa Héctor; Téllez-Rojo Martha María; Hernández-Cadena Leticia; Mercado-García Adriana; Smith Donald; Solano-González Maritsa; Hernández-Avila Mauricio; Hu Howard
Biological markers of fetal lead exposure at each stage of pregnancy.
Journal of toxicology and environmental health. Part A 2006;
69(
19):.
It has been suggested that plasma lead (Pb) represents the fraction of circulating Pb that crosses the placenta. Whole-blood Pb levels, the conventional method for measuring circulating Pb, may not adequately reflect plasma Pb levels. The objective of this study was to assess the relationship between whole-blood and plasma Pb in a cohort of pregnant women. A group of 237 pregnant women, recruited in Mexico City from 1997 to 1999, was studied. whole-blood and plasma lead concentrations were evaluated at 12, 24, and 34 wk of gestation by inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry. Data were analyzed using a mixed-effects regression model. An exponential relationship was found between plasma and whole-blood Pb levels and significant modification of the association by stage of pregnancy. The association was stronger in the second trimester relative to the first, and it further increased in the third trimester. The model predicts increased plasma Pb levels for a given whole-blood Pb value as pregnancy advances for whole-blood Pb levels greater than approximately 110 microg/L, but not for blood Pb levels less than 100 microg/L. These findings could be due to physiologic changes during pregnancy, such as decreasing hematocrit, saturation of red cell Pb binding capacity, and increased bone resorption or intestinal absorption. Collectively, these data suggest that at elevated maternal blood Pb levels the developing fetus may be at greater risk of Pb exposure from increased maternal plasma Pb than otherwise predicted from whole-blood Pb levels.
Post to CiteULike 
Sign in free and see...
Visualized networks:
See your personal network in
sophisticated graphical views
GeoTargeted Searches:
Locate experts around the world
and connect with global collaborators
Research Profiles:
See the visualized research activity
of experts around the globe
Sign-in to see more