Please wait a minute...
Journal of Zhejiang University-SCIENCE A (Applied Physics & Engineering)  2004, Vol. 5 Issue (8): 1001-1004    DOI: 10.1631/jzus.2004.1001
Biomedical Science     
Effect of lead exposure on the immune function of lymphocytes and erythrocytes in preschool children
ZHAO Zheng-yan, LI Rong, SUN Li, LI Zhi-yu, YANG Ru-lai
Affiliated Children\'s Hospital, College of Medicine, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310003, China; Zhejiang Medical Advanced College of Professional Education, Hangzhou 310012, China; Maternity and Child Care Hospital of Gongshu Area, Hangzhou 310011, China
Download:     PDF (0 KB)     
Export: BibTeX | EndNote (RIS)      

Abstract  Objective: To investigate the influence of lead exposure on the immune function of lymphocytes and erythrocytes in preschool children. Materials and methods: A group of 217 children three to six years of age from a rural area were given a thorough physical examination and the concentration of lead in blood samples taken from each subject was determined. The indices of lymphocyte immunity (CD+3CD+4, CD+3CD+8, CD+4CD+8, CD-3CD+19) and erythrocyte immunity (RBC-C3b, RBC-IC, RFER, RFIR, CD35 and its average fluorescence intensity) of 40 children with blood lead levels above 0.483 μmol/L were measured and compared with a control group. Results: The blood lead levels of the 217 children ranged from 0.11 μmol/L to 2.11 μmol/L. The CD+3CD+4and CD+4CD+8 cells were lower (P<0.01) and the CD+3CD+8 cells were higher in the lead-poisoned subjects than those in the control group (P<0.05). CD+8 and CD-3CD+19 did not show significant differences. Although the RBC-C3b rosette forming rate was lower and the RBC-IC rosette forming rate was higher in the lead-poisoned group, this difference could not be shown to be statistically significant (P>0.05). RFIR was found to be lower in the lead-poisoned group (P<0.01). Compared with the control group, the positive rate of CD35 was not found to be significantly different in a group of 25 lead-poisoned children (P>0.05), while the average fluorescence intensity was lower in the lead-poisoned group (P<0.05). Conclusion: Lead exposure can result in impaired immune function of T lymphocytes and erythrocytes in preschool children.

Key wordsChildren      Lead exposure      Lymphocyte immunity      Erythrocyte immunity     
Received: 16 October 2003     
CLC:  R595.2  
  R593  
Cite this article:

ZHAO Zheng-yan, LI Rong, SUN Li, LI Zhi-yu, YANG Ru-lai. Effect of lead exposure on the immune function of lymphocytes and erythrocytes in preschool children. Journal of Zhejiang University-SCIENCE A (Applied Physics & Engineering), 2004, 5(8): 1001-1004.

URL:

http://www.zjujournals.com/xueshu/zjus-a/10.1631/jzus.2004.1001     OR     http://www.zjujournals.com/xueshu/zjus-a/Y2004/V5/I8/1001

No related articles found!