55 research outputs found

    Residual cognitive deficits 50 years after lead poisoning during childhood

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    The long term neurobehavioural consequences of childhood lead poisoning are not known. In this study adult subjects with a documented history of lead poisoning before age 4 and matched controls were examined with an abbreviated battery of neuropsychological tests including measures of attention, reasoning, memory, motor speed, and current mood. The subjects exposed to lead were inferior to controls on almost all of the cognitive tasks. This pattern of widespread deficits resembles that found in children evaluated at the time of acute exposure to lead rather than the more circumscribed pattern typically seen in adults exposed to lead. Despite having completed as many years of schooling as controls, the subjects exposed to lead were lower in lifetime occupational status. Within the exposed group, performance on the neuropsychological battery and occupational status were related, consistent with the presumed impact of limitations in neuropsychological functioning on everyday life. The results suggest that many subjects exposed to lead suffered acute encephalopathy in childhood which resolved into a chronic subclinical encephalopathy with associated cognitive dysfunction still evident in adulthood. These findings lend support to efforts to limit exposure to lead in childhood

    Effect of familial hypophosphatemic rickets on dental development: a controlled, longitudinal study.

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    Familial or X-linked hypophosphatemic rickets (XLHR) is the most common type of rickets in developed countries today. While the dental manifestations of rickets are well reported, there is little information regarding its relationship to dental development and other dental anomalies. This investigation studied the rate of dental development and associated dental anomalies in 19 XLHR subjects compared with 38 race-, age-, and sex-matched control children. The results showed that in both XLHR and control children, no significant differences existed in dental age compared with the respective chronological age, indicating that rickets did not affect the rate of dental development. Longitudinal growth curves of seven XLHR and matched control children substantiated that relationships of dental to chronological ages were comparable in both groups. Male XLHR subjects showed significantly increased tendency for dental taurodontism with mean Crown-Body (CB):Root (R) ratio of 1.1 compared with 1.0 in females and 0.8 in controls (P < 0.02). Male XLHR children also showed significantly increased prevalence (50%) of ectopic permanent canines compared with control children (8%, P < 0.01)
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