Study shows lead from bullet fragments in venison can be absorbed into bloodstream, cause risk of lead exposure
The peer-reviewed study was published online today by the Public Library of
“We interpret the absorption of lead into the bloodstream of our test animals as clear evidence that humans can absorb lead from ingested bullet fragments,” said Grainger Hunt, lead author of the study.
This research challenges recent claims by the sport-shooting industry that lead in venison harvested with traditional ammunition poses no health risk to people who consume game meat. Primary prevention by harvesting game animals with lead-free alternatives to lead bullets is the most certain way to avoid lead exposure, Hunt said.
The dangers of lead to human health have been known since Roman times, but research in the last 10 years has shown that blood lead levels formerly regarded as trivial can have debilitating and often irreversible effects. Among these are intellectual and behavioral damage in children, including fetuses exposed before birth. Effects on older people include impaired motor function, kidney disease, cancer, and heart disease.
More than a decade of work by The Peregrine Fund in
In the current study, they used x-rays to look for lead bullet fragments in packaged venison from 30 deer shot with traditional lead bullets. Each deer had been taken to a different commercial meat processor. To simulate human consumption of the venison, the researchers then fed samples of the processed meat to test animals and monitored subsequent changes in blood lead concentration. Pigs were used as human surrogates for these experiments because of biological similarities to the human digestive tract.
Four pigs were fed venison that had tested positive for bullet fragments, and four received venison without fragments from the same deer. Average blood lead concentrations in pigs that consumed meat with bullet fragments peaked at 2.3 micrograms per deciliter just two days after the meal. That was significantly higher than the pigs that ate fragment-free venison, whose blood lead levels averaged 0.6 micrograms per deciliter.
Lead is mistaken by the human body for calcium and replaces it in nerve tissue, organs, and eventually in bone. During pregnancy, lead stored in bone may be released along with calcium, thereby exposing fetuses. Release of bone lead may again occ
Since 1991, the Centers for Disease Control has required medical intervention for children whose blood lead levels exceed 10 micrograms per deciliter. However, recent studies associate as little as 2 micrograms per deciliter with impaired cognitive function in children, as well as increased risk of cardiovascular problems in adults. In 2005 the CDC acknowledged that there is no “safe” lower threshold level for blood lead in young children and stressed the importance of preventing childhood exposures to lead. The CDC’s 1991 benchmark is out of date, according to toxicologists who proposed a new benchmark of 2 micrograms per deciliter in 2006.
“It is conceivable that deer-hunting families attain higher lead levels with frequent consumption of venison,” Hunt said. “Lead bullet fragments were patchily distributed in the meat, so a person eating a single venison burger may or may not get a dose – it’s a game of Russian Roulette. The more often they eat venison the higher the odds they will be exposed to lead.”
Ammunition lead has been found at elevated levels in the blood of subsistence hunters and their families in Greenland and
Of particular concern are the frequent beneficiaries of food donations, many of whom are already at risk from lead paint exposure in older low-income housing.
Several state Health Departments have recommended that children under 6 years old and women of child-bearing age should not eat venison killed with lead bullets, and urge all consumers to take precautions. A list of lead-free ammunition is available on the web at: http://www.azgfd.com/pdfs/w_c/condors/Non-LeadAmmo.pdf
For more information:
2008 CDC Study in
www.peregrinefund.org/Lead_conference/2008PbConf_links.htm
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The Peregrine Fund is best known for restoring the Peregrine Falcon, which was removed from the U.S. Endangered Species List in 1999. That success allowed the organization to expand its focus and apply its experience and understanding to raptor conservation efforts on behalf of 87 species in 61 countries worldwide. Founded in 1970, the organization is non-political, solution-oriented and hands-on, with a mission to:
- Restore rare species through captive breeding and releases.
- Conserve habitat.
- Improve capacity for local conservation.
- Conduct scientific research and environmental education.





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