PinterestThe use of leaded gasoline in motor
vehicles was phased out in the U.S., starting in the 1970s. Tomasz
Pietryszek/Getty Images
- Exposure to car exhaust from leaded gas
during childhood took a collective 824 million IQ points away from more
than 170 million U.S. adults alive today, a study has found.
- The researchers estimate that childhood
lead exposure has, on average, led to a reduction of 2.6 IQ points per
person as of 2015.
- The research also found that non-Hispanic
Black people, individuals with a lower family income-to-poverty-ratio, and
those with an older housing age were likely to have higher levels of lead
in their blood.
Back in the 1920s,
engineers began adding lead to gasoline to reduce engine knocking.
Almost immediately,
researchers raised concerns about the health impacts of the gas
additive, but it was not until 1973 that the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) issued its first call for manufacturers to begin a gradual
reduction of the amount of lead in gasoline.
Around that same time,
car manufacturers began building vehicles with catalytic converters, which
reduced pollution and required unleaded fuel.
By 1995, according to
the EPA, leaded fuel only accounted for 0.6% of total gasoline sales.
The EPA put the final nail in the coffin for gas with lead in 1996 by
officially banning its use in on-road vehicles.
Public health officials
are well aware that lead poisoning causes severe health problems. It
can, according to the EPA, adversely affect the nervous, reproductive, and
cardiovascular systems, alongside others.
Infants and young
children are especially sensitive to lead exposure. Among this population,
exposure may cause behavioral problems, learning deficits, impaired growth, and
lowered IQ.
In a new study
in the journal Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), researchers determined the lifelong burden
of exposure to car exhaust from leaded gas that every U.S. adult
alive in 2015 is now likely to carry.
Dr. Michael McFarland,
Ph.D., associate professor of sociology at Florida State University (FSU),
wrote the paper along with Matt Hauer, an assistant professor of sociology
at FSU, and Aaron Reuben, a doctoral student in clinical psychology at
Duke University.
The goal of the study,
Dr. McFarland explained in an email to Medical News Today, was
“to ascertain exactly how much damage was done.”
In addition to causing
cognitive and IQ deficits, the study authors point out that exposure to lead
can cause problems with emotional regulation and have physical effects, such as
producing deficits in fine motor skills.
“These deficits largely
persist across time and, in some cases, worsen and are now hypothesized to put
individuals at risk for difficult-to-treat chronic and age-related diseases,
including cardiovascular disease and dementia,” they write in the paper.
Dr. McFarland, who
studies health disparities, developed an interest in leaded gasoline while
reading the book What the Eyes Don’t See: A Story of Crisis,
Resistance, and Hope in an American City about the water crisis in
Flint, MI.
“It included one chapter
on the history of leaded gasoline,” Dr. McFarland wrote to MNT.
“[I]t showed approximately 90% of kids had elevated levels [of lead] from
1976–1980. I hadn’t studied the history of lead in the [U.S.], so this was
quite shocking.”
As he began to look at
the subject, Dr. McFarland discovered that researchers had dedicated an
insufficient amount of study to the topic.
“I checked the research
and found that we had no idea how many young children had been exposed to
adverse lead levels,” he said.
Deficits greatest for those born in 1966–1970
For the study, the team
used publicly available U.S. data on childhood blood-lead levelsTrusted Source, leaded
gas use, and population statistics to determine the likely lifelong
burden of lead exposure that every U.S. adult alive in 2015 now carries. From
there, the researchers estimated the impact of lead on intelligence by calculating
the reduction in IQ points that exposure to leaded gas likely caused.
The researchers report
two main findings:
- Childhood lead exposure among the U.S.
population by 2015 was responsible for the loss of more than 824 million
IQ points. That number equates to an average of 2.6 lost IQ points per
U.S. adult.
- Estimated lead-linked deficits were
greatest for individuals born between 1966 and 1970. This population
experienced an average deficit of 5.9 IQ points per person.
“Their estimate for the
number of IQ points lost is pretty high,” Dr. Nicholas Newman, a pediatrician
and the director of the Environmental Health and Lead Clinic at Cincinnati
Children’s Hospital, OH, told MNT.
“But I don’t think [it
is] implausible based on the way their work was done,” he said.
Overall, the scientists
found a drop in IQ in approximately 170 million U.S. adults. This number of
individuals represents close to half of the entire U.S. population, which
current estimates put at more than 332 million.
Lead’s impact on our world
If so many individuals
had not had exposure to lead from motor vehicle exhaust, we might be living in
a different society today, according to Dr. McFarland.
“We’d definitely be
healthier, wealthier, and smarter,” he said.
For their next
investigation, Dr. McFarland and the other researchers plan to look at the
effects of past lead exposure on brain health in old age.
“Recent research
suggests these exposures may increase rates of dementia in older age,” Dr.
McFarlandsaid.
The researchers also
want to evaluate racial disparities in lead exposure pre-1976. The researchers
point to 2021 research that found that non-Hispanic Black people have
disproportionately higher blood lead levels at the national level.
Dr. Newman hopes that
the study in PNAS will inspire researchers to develop
therapies for individuals who had exposure to high levels of lead as children.
“[I]t should be a call for us to be really vigilant in terms of caring for adults and anticipating these problems and then applying what we know that works to try to help them,” he told MNT.
Source : Medical News Today
0 Comments