Is a positive association between lead exposure and blood pressure supported by animal experiments? 1994

J A Staessen, and R R Lauwerys, and C J Bulpitt, and R Fagard, and P Lijnen, and H Roels, and L Thijs, and A Amery
Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium.

The possible association between low-level lead exposure and blood pressure and the causal nature of any such relationship continue to be debated. A recent meta-analysis of the human model data showed that on average a doubling of blood lead was associated with a rise in blood pressure averaging 1 mm Hg systolic and 0.6 mm Hg diastolic. The older animal studies, however, failed to show a significant pressure increase with massive lead exposure. This review therefore attempts to determine whether the more recent animal studies are supportive of a positive association between lead exposure and blood pressure elevation. Of the 21 animal studies published since 1977, one was carried out in dogs, one in pigeons, and the remainder in various rat strains. In the articles in which all the lead doses had been higher than 1 ppm, the association between blood pressure and exposure was found to be positive in seven, inconsistent in three, absent in four, and negative in one. Of the six animal experiments that employed lead doses not exceeding 1 ppm, five reported a small pressor effect. One of these five positive low-dose studies, however, failed to show a dose-effect relationship when exposure was increased from 0.1 to 1 ppm. In conclusion, most, but not all animal studies published since 1977 found a positive association between blood pressure and lead exposure. However, publication bias may have inflated the number of positive studies appearing in the literature.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D006973 Hypertension Persistently high systemic arterial BLOOD PRESSURE. Based on multiple readings (BLOOD PRESSURE DETERMINATION), hypertension is currently defined as when SYSTOLIC PRESSURE is consistently greater than 140 mm Hg or when DIASTOLIC PRESSURE is consistently 90 mm Hg or more. Blood Pressure, High,Blood Pressures, High,High Blood Pressure,High Blood Pressures
D007854 Lead A soft, grayish metal with poisonous salts; atomic number 82, atomic weight 207.2, symbol Pb.
D007855 Lead Poisoning Poisoning that results from chronic or acute ingestion, injection, inhalation, or skin absorption of LEAD or lead compounds. Poisoning, Lead,Lead Poisonings,Poisonings, Lead
D008297 Male Males
D010856 Columbidae Family in the order COLUMBIFORMES, comprised of pigeons or doves. They are BIRDS with short legs, stout bodies, small heads, and slender bills. Some sources call the smaller species doves and the larger pigeons, but the names are interchangeable. Columba livia,Doves,Pigeons,Domestic Pigeons,Feral Pigeons,Rock Doves,Rock Pigeons,Domestic Pigeon,Dove,Dove, Rock,Doves, Rock,Feral Pigeon,Pigeon,Pigeon, Domestic,Pigeon, Feral,Pigeon, Rock,Pigeons, Domestic,Pigeons, Feral,Pigeons, Rock,Rock Dove,Rock Pigeon
D001794 Blood Pressure PRESSURE of the BLOOD on the ARTERIES and other BLOOD VESSELS. Systolic Pressure,Diastolic Pressure,Pulse Pressure,Pressure, Blood,Pressure, Diastolic,Pressure, Pulse,Pressure, Systolic,Pressures, Systolic
D004195 Disease Models, Animal Naturally-occurring or experimentally-induced animal diseases with pathological processes analogous to human diseases. Animal Disease Model,Animal Disease Models,Disease Model, Animal
D004285 Dogs The domestic dog, Canis familiaris, comprising about 400 breeds, of the carnivore family CANIDAE. They are worldwide in distribution and live in association with people. (Walker's Mammals of the World, 5th ed, p1065) Canis familiaris,Dog
D005260 Female Females
D006801 Humans Members of the species Homo sapiens. Homo sapiens,Man (Taxonomy),Human,Man, Modern,Modern Man

Related Publications

J A Staessen, and R R Lauwerys, and C J Bulpitt, and R Fagard, and P Lijnen, and H Roels, and L Thijs, and A Amery
March 2012, Environmental health perspectives,
J A Staessen, and R R Lauwerys, and C J Bulpitt, and R Fagard, and P Lijnen, and H Roels, and L Thijs, and A Amery
October 2023, Journal of public health research,
J A Staessen, and R R Lauwerys, and C J Bulpitt, and R Fagard, and P Lijnen, and H Roels, and L Thijs, and A Amery
February 2000, Nihon rinsho. Japanese journal of clinical medicine,
J A Staessen, and R R Lauwerys, and C J Bulpitt, and R Fagard, and P Lijnen, and H Roels, and L Thijs, and A Amery
January 2007, Archives of environmental & occupational health,
J A Staessen, and R R Lauwerys, and C J Bulpitt, and R Fagard, and P Lijnen, and H Roels, and L Thijs, and A Amery
August 1996, International journal of epidemiology,
J A Staessen, and R R Lauwerys, and C J Bulpitt, and R Fagard, and P Lijnen, and H Roels, and L Thijs, and A Amery
November 1987, British journal of industrial medicine,
J A Staessen, and R R Lauwerys, and C J Bulpitt, and R Fagard, and P Lijnen, and H Roels, and L Thijs, and A Amery
March 1993, American journal of epidemiology,
J A Staessen, and R R Lauwerys, and C J Bulpitt, and R Fagard, and P Lijnen, and H Roels, and L Thijs, and A Amery
May 2015, Zhonghua liu xing bing xue za zhi = Zhonghua liuxingbingxue zazhi,
J A Staessen, and R R Lauwerys, and C J Bulpitt, and R Fagard, and P Lijnen, and H Roels, and L Thijs, and A Amery
February 2020, Ecotoxicology and environmental safety,
J A Staessen, and R R Lauwerys, and C J Bulpitt, and R Fagard, and P Lijnen, and H Roels, and L Thijs, and A Amery
December 2018, The American journal of cardiology,
Copied contents to your clipboard!