Blood lead level distribution by by age group in Japanese

Abstract
Blood lead levels of 634 healthy Japanese (422 males and 212 females), aged 0–87, living in the Kyushu and Okinawa Islands, were determined by the colorimetric dithizone method and atomic absorption spectrometry. The lead level in the atmospheric environment was not extremely high; it was below 1 μg/m3 in most of the places examined. The differences in the geometric means of blood lead levels between 0–5 yr and other age groups were statistically significant (P3. The pattern of lead accumulation in blood by age was similar to the theoretical curve for the accumulated total amount of lead obtained by simulation. The fact probably indicates that blood lead levels in Japanese are dependent on lead in daily foods rather than on lead in the atmospheric environment.