4.7 Article

Blood lead concentration after a shotgun accident

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH PERSPECTIVES
Volume 110, Issue 1, Pages 115-117

Publisher

US DEPT HEALTH HUMAN SCIENCES PUBLIC HEALTH SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1289/ehp.02110115

Keywords

blood lead; gunshot wound; health effects; hemoglobin level

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In an accidental shooting, a man in his late forties was hit in his left shoulder region by about 60 lead pellets from a shotgun. Pie had injuries to the vessels, the clavicle, muscles, and nerves, with total paralysis of the left arm due to axonal injury. After several surgical revisions and temporary cover with split skin, reconstructive surgery was carried out 54 days after the accident. The brachial plexus was swollen, but the continuity of the nerve trunks was not broken (no neuroma present). We determined the blood lead (BPb) concentration during a follow-up period of 12 months. The BPb concentration increased considerably during the first months. Although 30 lead pellets were removed during the reconstructive surgery, the BPb concentration continued to rise, and reached a peals of 62 mug/dL (3.0 mumol/L) on day 81. Thereafter it started to decline. Twelve months after the accident, BPb had leveled off at about 30 mug/dL. At that time, muscle and sensory functions had partially recovered. The BPb concentration exceeded 30 mug/dL for 9 months, which may have influenced the recovery rate of nerve function. Subjects with a large number of lead pellets or fragments embedded in the body after shooting accidents should be followed for many years by regular determinations of BPb. To obtain a more stable basis for risk assessment, the BPb concentrations should be corrected for variations in the subject's hemoglobin concentration or erythrocyte volume fraction.

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