People who eat wild game killed with lead bullets tend to have
higher levels of lead in their blood than people who don't, according
to a first-of-its-kind study of 738 North Dakotans.
"People who ate a lot of wild game tended to have higher lead levels
than those who ate little or none," Dr. Stephen Pickard, epidemiologist
for the North Dakota Department of Health, said Wednesday.
The study also showed that the more recent the consumption of wild
game killed with lead bullets, the higher the level of lead in the
blood.
The blood lead levels of those tested were considered low, but even
low levels can have adverse health effects, especially for children and
pregnant women.
Officials recommended that pregnant women and children under 6 not
eat any venison from deer killed with lead bullets -- the same
recommendation made last month by the Minnesota Health Department.
"Children under 6 are particularly vulnerable because their brains
are still developing," Pickard said. "It causes permanent brain damage
even in very small quantities. There is no safe exposure level for
small children. We see children with permanent lower intelligence and
changes in behavior."
Lead can increase the risk that a pregnant woman could lose her baby
or deliver it prematurely, Pickard said. In adults, lead can cause high
blood pressure, hearing loss and infertility, though usually with
higher lead levels.
The study, done by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) and the North Dakota Department of Health, appears to
add to the evidence that using lead bullets can pose potential health
problems for hunters and their families. A Minnesota study last summer
showed lead bullets fired from high-powered rifles scatter lead
fragments -- many too small to see or feel -- up to 18 inches from the
wound.