Abstract

Kathmandu tricycle taxi drivers, whose environmental lead (Pb) exposure is ascribable mainly to vehicular exhaust, were studied to examine a dose-response relationship between blood Pb (Pb-B) and serum erythropoietin (sEPO) concentrations. Subjects were 27 drivers and 9 non-drivers. They were non-anemic healthy men with normal renal function. Pb-B was measured by an atomic absorption spectrometer with a graphite furnace, and sEPO was determined with a sandwich-type enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. sEPO levels in drivers were lower than those of non-drivers, while Pb-B levels in drivers were higher than those of non-drivers. There was an inverse relationship between Pb-B and sEPO. The data suggest that Pb inhibits renal EPO production in a dose-dependent manner in persons with subclinical Pb toxicity. sEPO may serve as an early biochemical marker of subclinical Pb toxicity.

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