Originally published May 28, 2008 at 12:00 AM | Page modified May 28, 2008 at 12:41 AM
Strong link between crime, lead exposure in children
The first study to follow lead-exposed children from before birth into adulthood has shown that even relatively low levels of lead permanently...
Los Angeles Times
The first study to follow lead-exposed children from before birth into adulthood has shown that even relatively low levels of lead permanently damage the brain and are linked to higher numbers of arrests, particularly for violent crime.
Previous studies linking lead to such problems have used indirect measures of lead and criminality, and critics have argued that socioeconomic and other factors may be responsible for the observed effects.
But by measuring blood levels of lead before birth and during the first seven years of life and then correlating the levels with arrest records and brain size, Cincinnati researchers have produced the strongest evidence yet that lead plays a major role in crime.
The team also found that lead exposure is a continuing problem despite the efforts of the federal government and cities to minimize exposure.
The average lead levels in the study "unfortunately are still seen in many thousands of children throughout the United States," said Dr. Philip Landrigan, director of the Children's Environmental Health Center at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York.
The link between criminal behavior and lead exposure was found among even the least-contaminated children in the study, who were exposed to amounts of lead similar to what the average U.S. child is exposed to today, said Landrigan, who was not involved in the study.
"People will sometimes say, 'This is in the past. We are cleaning up lead. We don't have lead problems anymore,' " said criminologist Deborah Denno of Fordham University in New York, who was not involved in the study. "The Ohio study says this is still a big problem."
Nationwide, about 310,000 children between 1 and 5 have blood lead levels above the federal guideline of 10 micrograms per deciliter, and experts suspect that many times that number have lower levels that are nonetheless dangerous.
"It is a national disgrace that so many children continue to be exposed at levels known to be neurotoxic," said Dr. David Bellinger, of the Harvard Medical School, who wrote an editorial accompanying the research.
Although some urban soil is contaminated with lead from gasoline, 80 percent of lead exposure comes from houses built before 1978. Paint in such houses often contains up to 50 percent lead and, even though it has been covered by newer, lead-free paints, it flakes or rubs off.
About 38 million U.S. homes, 40 percent of the nation's housing, contain lead-based paint, according to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. The problem is particularly acute in urban areas, which typically have older housing that has not been renovated.
More recently, parents and authorities have become concerned about lead-based paint in toys imported from China.
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Researchers have long known that lead exposure reduces IQ by damaging brain cells in children during their early years.
It is also known that lead increases children's distractibility, impulsiveness and restlessness and leaves them with a shortened attention span, all factors considered precursors of aggressive or violent behavior.
A landmark 1990 paper by Denno linked lead to increases in criminal behavior, but the children in the study were not tested for lead levels. The diagnosis was based on their physicians' evaluation, Denno said.
The Cincinnati Lead Study enrolled 376 pregnant women in Cincinnati between 1979 and 1984, measuring their blood lead levels during pregnancy and the children's levels during the their first seven years.
In the first of the new studies, environmental health research Kim Dietrich of the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine studied 250 of the original group, correlating their lead levels with adult criminal-arrest records from Hamilton County, Ohio.
Controlling for a variety of factors, including parental IQ, education, income and drug use, Dietrich and colleagues found that the more lead in a child's blood from birth through age 7, the more likely he or she was arrested as an adult. The tie between high lead and violent crime was particularly strong.
They found that 55 percent of the subjects (63 percent of males) had been arrested, and that the average was five arrests between the ages of 18 and 24.
The higher the blood-lead level at any time in childhood, the greater the likelihood of arrests. "The strongest association was with violent criminal activity: murder, rape domestic violence, assault, robbery and possession of weapons," Dietrich said.
Blood levels in the children ranged from 4 to 37 micrograms per deciliter.
The researchers found, for example, that every 5-microgram-per-deciliter increase in blood lead level at age 6 was accompanied by a 50 percent increase in violent crime later in life.
Confirming previous findings, the effect of lead was strongest in males, who had an arrest rate 4.5 times that of females.
"We need to be thinking about lead as a drug and a fairly strong one," Dietrich said.
In the second study, radiologist Kim Cecil and her colleagues examined a "representative sample" of 157 members of the same group using whole-brain MRI scans. They found that those with the highest blood levels of lead during childhood had the smallest brain volume.
For those with average lead level in the study, their brains were about 1.2 percent smaller. The most affected regions of the brain were those regulating decision making, impulse control and attention, among other areas.
"The most important message is that lead affects brain volume, independent of demographic and social factors that are often used to explain away poor outcomes" in life, Cecil said. "This is independent biological evidence showing that the brain is affected by lead."
Material from USA Today is included in this report.
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
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