Sikkert ikke den du sikter til, men det står referert til blymålinger i befolkningen her f.eks:
http://www.nrahuntersrights.org/LeadIssues.aspx
Dette er fra NRA sine sider, men likevel.
Jeg tillater meg å lime inn et utklipp:
Q: Do people become ill from eating venison taken with lead ammunition?
A: Hunters have eaten venison taken with lead bullets for hundreds of years. Yet there is not one documented case of lead poisoning from eating deer meat. Doctors are required to report all cases of lead poisoning to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), yet according to CDC public health advisor Kimball Credle, no cases have ever been traced to wild game meat.
Q: What studies have been conducted on lead levels in humans caused by eating venison?
A: At the request of the North Dakota Department of Health, the CDC tested blood lead levels in 738 residents of that state. Results were released in November 2008, and not one individual tested had levels considered elevated. According to the CDC, blood levels are considered “elevated” in children when they are above 10 micrograms per deciliter of blood; and in adults 25 micrograms per deciliter. The highest level in the whole CDC test was 9.8 micrograms per deciliter.
The geometric mean of the CDC study of 1.17 micrograms per deciliter was lower than the geometric mean of lead in the overall U.S. population (1.60 micrograms per deciliter). More than 86 percent of the people in the CDC test reported eating more than one type of wild game.
The lead levels of children under 6, those who the Minnesota Department of Health deems "the most at risk," had a mean of just 0.88 micrograms per deciliter of blood. That’s just one part per billion and less than half the national average.
Q: Has anyone other than the CDC conducted tests on blood lead levels in humans?
A: The Iowa State Department of Health has tested blood-lead levels since 1992, in 500,000 youths and 25,000 adults. They have not found one single case of lead poisoning from wild game.