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Lead-based
paint is hazardous to your health. Lead-based
paint is a major source of lead poisoning for
children and can also affect adults. In children,
lead poisoning can cause irreversible brain damage
and can impair mental functioning. It can retard
mental and physical development and reduce attention
span. It can also retard fetal development even
at extremely low levels of lead. In adults, it
can cause irritability, poor muscle coordination,
and nerve damage to the sense organs and nerves
controlling the body. Lead poisoning may also
cause problems with reproduction (such as a decreased
sperm count). It may also increase blood pressure.
Thus, young children, fetuses, infants, and adults
with high blood pressure are the most vulnerable
to the effects of lead.
Lead
was used as a pigment and drying agent in "alkyd"
oil based paint. "Latex" water based
paints generally have not contained lead. About
two-thirds of the homes built before 1940 and
one-half of the homes built from 1940 to 1960
contain heavily-leaded paint. Some homes built
after 1960 also contain heavily-leaded paint.
It may be on any interior or exterior surface,
particularly on woodwork, doors, and windows.
In 1978, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission
lowered the legal maximum lead content in most
kinds of paint to 0.06% (a trace amount). Consider
having the paint in homes constructed before the
1980s tested for lead before renovating or if
the paint or underlying surface is deteriorating.
This is particularly important if infants, children,
or pregnant women are present. Colorado
Dept of Health Regulation #19
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