Abstract
The aim of this paper was to assess the endogenous release of lead from bone to blood, in 204 exposed subjects resuming their duties after a 10-month strike in a primary lead smelter in 1991. In vivo109Cd K X-ray Fluorescence (109Cd K
* Corresponding authors
a
Centro de Física Atómica da Universidade de Lisboa, Av. Prof. Gama Pinto 2, P-1649-003 Lisboa, Portugal
E-mail:
jbrito@alf1.cii.fc.ul.pt
Fax: +351 217954288
Tel: +351 217904991
b Instituto Superior de Ciências da Saúde, Monte de Caparica, Lisboa, Portugal
c Department of Physics and Astronomy, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
d Department of Nuclear Medicine, Hamilton Health Sciences, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
e Brunswick Mining and Smelting, Belledune, New Brunswick, Canada
The aim of this paper was to assess the endogenous release of lead from bone to blood, in 204 exposed subjects resuming their duties after a 10-month strike in a primary lead smelter in 1991. In vivo109Cd K X-ray Fluorescence (109Cd K
J. A. A. Brito, F. E. McNeill, C. E. Webber, S. Wells, N. Richard, M. L. Carvalho and D. R. Chettle, J. Environ. Monit., 2002, 4, 194 DOI: 10.1039/B108817C
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