Advertisement

First time visiting? Register for
your free username and password

Main Menu
Forum Home
Search
 Register New User
 Books, Videos, DVDs
 Current Lyme News
 Lyme/Rife Forum
 Suggestion Box
Sponsored Links
Connie's Blog
Watch Connie Strasheim, author of "The Lyme Disease Survival Guide," on her new video blog!
Forum Stats
2717 Members
24 Forums
4572 Topics
5952 Posts

Max Online: 251 @ 12/25/10 12:01 AM
Top Posters
2069
Angls4hope
1927
LymeAngl
263
BryanRosner
178
Rich_skiweasel7
112
Steve
Request Free Info

Page 1 of 1 1
Topic Options
Rate This Topic
#4405 - 04/30/09 09:57 AM Bone Lead and Cognitive Function....
LymeAngl Moderator
Forum Veteran


Registered: 11/09/06
Posts: 1928
Workers exposed to lead show more cognitive problems later in life. This article is vital to understand. Bone lead has a 1/2 life of 30 years, and it is in equilibrium with other tissues, leading to cataracts, as published in JAMA by Harvard and now this vital study ties it to loss of cognitive function!

"2004, the current study followed up with 83 of the original lead-exposed workers and 51 of the original non-exposed workers. Researchers measured current lead levels in their blood and cumulative lead levels through special X-rays of the tibia, or lower leg bone (bone is the final repository of circulating blood lead, where it has a half life of about 30 years). Researchers also re-administered the test battery to assess cognitive performance relative to both measures of lead.

Among the lead-exposed workers, men with higher cumulative lead had significantly lower cognitive scores. The clearest inverse relationships- when one went up, the other went down - emerged between cumulative lead and spatial ability, learning and memory, and overall cognitive score.

This linkage was more significant in the older lead-exposed men, of at least age 55. Their cognitive scores were significantly different from those of younger lead-exposed men even when the researchers controlled for current blood levels of lead. In other words, even when men no longer worked at the battery plants, their earlier prolonged exposure was enough to matter."

With all of the concern about loss of cognitive function and various therapeutic approaches being researched, the basic need for long-term lead lowering therapy to avoid dementia is still largely being ignored! This research should at least cause you to focus on trying to have undetectable blood lead levels for the rest of your life, since bones will continue to release lead into other tissues for at least 15 years, as they are so high in everyone!

Save your memory, you need all you can get! Help get the lead out by adding Zeolite and oral chelation for your life.

Garry F. Gordon MD,DO,MD(H)
President, Gordon Research Institute
http://www.gordonresearch.com

http://www.physorg.com/news150954580.html

Workers exposed to lead show more cognitive problems later in life.
January 12th, 2009

Both the developing brain and the aging brain can suffer from lead exposure. For older people, a buildup of lead from earlier exposure may be enough to result in greater cognitive problems after age 55, according to a follow-up study of adults exposed to lead at work.
A full report appears in the January issue of Neuropsychology, which is published by the American Psychological Association.
From the Graduate School of Public Health and the School of Medicine at the University of Pittsburgh, the authors reported that cognitive problems were linked to cumulative exposure.
The researchers followed up on the 1982 Lead Occupational Study, which assessed the cognitive abilities of 288 lead-exposed and 181 non-exposed male workers in eastern Pennsylvania. The lead-exposed workers came from three lead battery plants; the unexposed control workers made truck chassis at a nearby location. At both points in time, all the workers were given the Pittsburgh Occupational Exposures Test battery, which includes measures of five primary cognitive domains: psychomotor speed, spatial function, executive function, general intelligence, and learning and memory.
In 1982, lead-exposed workers were found to have an average blood lead level of 40 micrograms per deciliter (ug/dL), well above normal. Pennsylvania workers found to have 25 ug/dL or more must be taken off the job. In 1982, the unexposed workers had an average blood level of 7.2, within normal limits.
In 2004, the current study followed up with 83 of the original lead-exposed workers and 51 of the original non-exposed workers. Researchers measured current lead levels in their blood and cumulative lead levels through special X-rays of the tibia, or lower leg bone (bone is the final repository of circulating blood lead, where it has a half life of about 30 years). Researchers also re-administered the test battery to assess cognitive performance relative to both measures of lead.
Among the lead-exposed workers, men with higher cumulative lead had significantly lower cognitive scores. The clearest inverse relationships - when one went up, the other went down - emerged between cumulative lead and spatial ability, learning and memory, and overall cognitive score.
This linkage was more significant in the older lead-exposed men, of at least age 55. Their cognitive scores were significantly different from those of younger lead-exposed men even when the researchers controlled for current blood levels of lead. In other words, even when men no longer worked at the battery plants, their earlier prolonged exposure was enough to matter.
The mild deficits, although not clinically significant, were consistent with other studies that show previous exposure to lead is, according to the authors, "particularly detrimental to the aging brain and that specific cognitive domains may be particularly vulnerable."
Scientists have been investigating how lead damages the brain, especially the hippocampus and frontal cortex, seats of memory and learning. Lead exposure also puts people at greater risk for high blood pressure, which itself weakens cognition -- one possible pathway by which lead can cause problems.
The men who built lead batteries were exposed to it in the air and through their skin. Other occupations, including semiconductor fabrication, ceramics, welding and soldering, and some construction work, also may expose workers. The authors wrote that, "Increased prevention measures in work environments will be necessary to reduce [lead exposure] to zero and decrease risk of cognitive decline."
Article: "Association of Cumulative Lead and Neurocognitive Function in An Occupational Cohort," Naila Khalil, PhD, University of Pittsburgh; Lisa A. Morrow, PhD, and Herbert Needleman, MD, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine; Evelyn O. Talbott, PhD, John W. Wilson, PhD, and Jane A. Cauley, PhD, University of Pittsburgh; Neuropsychology, Vol. 23, No. 1.
Source: American Psychological Association

Top
#5349 - 09/04/10 06:31 PM Re: Bone Lead and Cognitive Function.... [Re: LymeAngl]
Ukonline
New Researcher


Registered: 07/20/10
Posts: 6
The relationship between performance on cognitive tasks and circulating levels of lead in blood and accumulated levels of lead in bone was examined in 141 middle-aged and elderly men from a longitudinal study of aging. The mean (SD) blood lead level was low [5.5 (3.5) μg/dl], and mean patella and tibia lead levels were 31.7 (19.2) and 22.5 (12.2) μg/g bone mineral, respectively. Cognitive tests measured attention, perceptual speed, memory, language, and spatial copying.

_____________________
free software
download software
free download



Edited by Ukonline (12/09/10 11:15 PM)

Top
Page 1 of 1 1


Moderator:  LymeAngl, Angls4hope 
Hop to:
Bryan's Blog

Latest Forum Topics
Latest News:

 
This doctor just released the first book about Lyme written by an M.D. Learn More.

Shout Box

Newest Members
christforgaveme, bmwrodd, SaraHailey, Burtonsville, Kenny9
2717 Registered Users
Who's Online
0 registered and 49 anonymous users online.
Lyme Disease Book

Generated in 0.032 seconds in which 0.017 seconds were spent on a total of 13 queries. Zlib compression disabled.

Lyme Community Forums - Discussion, Support, Friends!

 New posts in this forum since you last visited              No new posts  


Copyright © 2006 Lyme Community Forums. All rights reserved.

DISCLAIMER:  This group is for informational and educational purposes only and is not intended to prevent, diagnose, treat or cure disease.  The owners, moderators, members and contributors of this group are not doctors.  This group shall not substitute for advice from a licensed healthcare practitioner.

Links of Interest

Advertise with us       Visit our Storefront       History of Rife Technology       What is Chronic Lyme Disease?

Learn more about the Marshall Protocol      Chronic Lyme Controversy      James Schaller, M.D.

Sauna for Lyme Disease     Natural Antibiotics for Lyme Disease       Chronic Lyme Science      Pulsed Electromagnetic Fields (PEMF)

Lyme Disease in the UK (United Kingdom), Canada, Europe, and abroad     Immune Response Training

Ozone and Oxygen Treatments    Mercury Poisoning and Lyme Disease    Electromagnetic Field Sensitivity - Real or Imaginary?

Lyme Disease News    Lyme Disease Research    The Lyme Disease Solution by Ken Singleton, M.D.     The Lyme Autism Connection

The Holistic Handbook of Sauna Therapy, by Nenah Sylver, Ph.D.      The New Lyme Disease Insights Blog

Don't miss our

works in progress page

.