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Association between bone lead concentration and aggression in youth from a sub-cohort of the birth to twenty cohort

Association between bone lead concentration and aggression in youth from a sub-cohort of the birth to twenty cohort
Association between bone lead concentration and aggression in youth from a sub-cohort of the birth to twenty cohort
Background: An association between blood-lead levels and aggression has been demonstrated in children and adolescent youth in South Africa. However, there are limited studies that have assessed aggression as an outcome for cumulative lead exposure using bone lead concentration. This study aims to assess the association between bone lead concentration and aggressive behaviour among a sample of youth in South Africa. Methods: Bone lead in 100 participants (53 males and 47 females) recruited and followed in the Birth to Twenty (BT20) Cohort were measured using 109 Cd-based, K-shell X-ray fluorescence (KXRF). The Buss–Perry Aggression questionnaire was used to measure aggressive behaviour. Linear regression models were fitted to determine the association between aggression score for physical, verbal, anger and hostility and bone lead, adjusting for known confounders. Results: A one-microgram-per-gram increase in bone lead was found to increase the score for all four scales of aggression, but significantly only for anger (β = 0.2 [95% CI 0.04–0.370]). Psychosocial factors such as a history of family violence and exposure to neighbourhood crime were significant predictors for aggression. Conclusions: The study provides a preliminary overview of the relationship between cumulative lead exposure and behavioural problems such as aggression. A larger sample, across exposed communities, may prove more definitive in further investigating the association between these two important public health factors and to maximize generalizability.
bone lead, blood lead, aggression, BT20 cohort, KXRF, late adolescence, South Africa
1660-4601
Tlotleng, Nonhlanhla
26516036-db60-4e88-a04c-06fa72f47ef4
Naicker, Nisha
cbb0186e-8e7a-4891-8548-f256e62062e2
Mathee, Angela
0bc952dd-ee46-4328-b70e-fb75b4721c72
Todd, Andrew C.
82ee83e5-3116-4dda-9c48-39a47c43f170
Nkomo, Palesa
6f338e2f-72ed-45c6-83c1-c415d65c7fc6
Norris, Shane A.
1d346f1b-6d5f-4bca-ac87-7589851b75a4
Tlotleng, Nonhlanhla
26516036-db60-4e88-a04c-06fa72f47ef4
Naicker, Nisha
cbb0186e-8e7a-4891-8548-f256e62062e2
Mathee, Angela
0bc952dd-ee46-4328-b70e-fb75b4721c72
Todd, Andrew C.
82ee83e5-3116-4dda-9c48-39a47c43f170
Nkomo, Palesa
6f338e2f-72ed-45c6-83c1-c415d65c7fc6
Norris, Shane A.
1d346f1b-6d5f-4bca-ac87-7589851b75a4

Tlotleng, Nonhlanhla, Naicker, Nisha, Mathee, Angela, Todd, Andrew C., Nkomo, Palesa and Norris, Shane A. (2022) Association between bone lead concentration and aggression in youth from a sub-cohort of the birth to twenty cohort. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19 (4), [2200]. (doi:10.3390/ijerph19042200).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: An association between blood-lead levels and aggression has been demonstrated in children and adolescent youth in South Africa. However, there are limited studies that have assessed aggression as an outcome for cumulative lead exposure using bone lead concentration. This study aims to assess the association between bone lead concentration and aggressive behaviour among a sample of youth in South Africa. Methods: Bone lead in 100 participants (53 males and 47 females) recruited and followed in the Birth to Twenty (BT20) Cohort were measured using 109 Cd-based, K-shell X-ray fluorescence (KXRF). The Buss–Perry Aggression questionnaire was used to measure aggressive behaviour. Linear regression models were fitted to determine the association between aggression score for physical, verbal, anger and hostility and bone lead, adjusting for known confounders. Results: A one-microgram-per-gram increase in bone lead was found to increase the score for all four scales of aggression, but significantly only for anger (β = 0.2 [95% CI 0.04–0.370]). Psychosocial factors such as a history of family violence and exposure to neighbourhood crime were significant predictors for aggression. Conclusions: The study provides a preliminary overview of the relationship between cumulative lead exposure and behavioural problems such as aggression. A larger sample, across exposed communities, may prove more definitive in further investigating the association between these two important public health factors and to maximize generalizability.

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ijerph-19-02200-v3 - Version of Record
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More information

Submitted date: 17 December 2021
Accepted/In Press date: 10 February 2022
Published date: 15 February 2022
Keywords: bone lead, blood lead, aggression, BT20 cohort, KXRF, late adolescence, South Africa

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 503931
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/503931
ISSN: 1660-4601
PURE UUID: e696fea7-2120-4a69-b58f-0c4bec547893
ORCID for Shane A. Norris: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7124-3788

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Date deposited: 18 Aug 2025 16:53
Last modified: 23 Aug 2025 02:16

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Contributors

Author: Nonhlanhla Tlotleng
Author: Nisha Naicker
Author: Angela Mathee
Author: Andrew C. Todd
Author: Palesa Nkomo
Author: Shane A. Norris ORCID iD

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