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Title: Erythrocyte zinc protoporphyrin determination for screening for lead exposure. Author: Torrance JD, Mills W, Green A, Kilroe-Smith TA, Smith AN. Journal: S Afr Med J; 1985 May 25; 67(21):848-50. PubMed ID: 3992423. Abstract: Free erythrocyte protoporphyrin (FEP), erythrocyte zinc protoporphyrin (EZP) and blood lead concentrations were measured in 150 male subjects, 110 of whom were employed in industries where lead exposure was possible. Eighty-seven per cent of these 110 workers had blood lead levels above the maximum safe level of 40 micrograms/dl, which suggests that the factory control of lead toxicity is inadequate. The AVIV dedicated front-face fluorometer (AVIV instruments, New Jersey, USA), which measures EZP, was evaluated as a simple, rapid method of screening for lead accumulation. EZP concentrations agreed well with conventional estimations of FEP (r = 0,987, P less than 0,0001), and both correlated well with the blood lead concentration (r = 0,558, P less than 0,0001 for EZP; r = 0,633, P less than 0,0001 for FEP). The specificity of the EZP level as a screening test was found to be high (98%) and the sensitivity moderately good (83%). In view of the ease and speed of operation of this portable fluorometer, it should prove useful as an aid to the detection of early lead intoxication.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]