Bioaccumulation of lead (Pb) and its effects on human: A review

•This review article discusses in detail the health effects in humans due to long-term exposure to lead.•The article also illustrates the complications when the blood lead level in both men and women is more.•The oxidative stress that occurs in the human cells causing severe cell damage has also bee...

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Published in:Journal of hazardous materials advances Vol. 7; p. 100094
Main Authors: Collin, M Samuel, Venkatraman, Senthil Kumar, Vijayakumar, Naveensubramaniam, Kanimozhi, V, Arbaaz, S Muhammad, Stacey, R G Sibiya, Anusha, Jogannagari, Choudhary, Rajan, Lvov, Vladislav, Tovar, Gabriel Ibrahin, Senatov, Fedor, Koppala, Sivasankar, Swamiappan, Sasikumar
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier B.V 01-08-2022
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Summary:•This review article discusses in detail the health effects in humans due to long-term exposure to lead.•The article also illustrates the complications when the blood lead level in both men and women is more.•The oxidative stress that occurs in the human cells causing severe cell damage has also been discussed.•Finally, the preventive measures and the treatment for lead toxicity and lead accumulation have been discussed along with chelation therapy. Lead is a prevalent heavy metal that pollutes the environment and accumulates in the human body via absorption, bioavailability, bioconcentration, and biomagnification disrupts the neurological, skeletal, reproductive, hematopoietic, renal, and cardiovascular systems. Lead's distinctive physical and chemical characteristics make it ideal for a variety of uses. It has been linked to human activities for ages and is harmful to health. This review article examines the long-term health consequences of lead exposure in humans. Acute and chronic symptoms of lead poisoning include kidney, brain, reproductive organ, and CNS/PNS damage. Toxic metals have a long half-life in the bone matrix and brain (2–3 years), causing neurological problems and bone loss. The article also shows the problems of high BPb in both men and women during pregnancy. Renal system blood lead levels of 30–60 g/dL may cause kidney failure in severe circumstances. The oxidative stress that occurs in human cells has also been explored. Finally, lead poisoning and lead buildup prevention and therapy have been reviewed. The use of micronutrients and antioxidants has demonstrated a reduction in harmful effects. Adults with BPb >45 g/dL should have chelation, whereas children should receive succimer. [Display omitted]
ISSN:2772-4166
2772-4166
DOI:10.1016/j.hazadv.2022.100094