@article {Davidowitz:1998:1559-6109:51, title = "Increase in Lead Concentration in the Drinking Water of an Animal Care Facility", journal = "Journal of the American Association for Laboratory Animal Science", parent_itemid = "infobike://aalas/jaalas", publishercode ="aalas", year = "1998", volume = "37", number = "1", publication date ="1998-01-01T00:00:00", pages = "51-53", itemtype = "ARTICLE", issn = "1559-6109", eissn = "2769-6677", url = "https://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/aalas/jaalas/1998/00000037/00000001/art00001", author = "Davidowitz, Bradley I. and Boehm, Kirk M. and Banovetz, Sandra E. and Binkley, Neil C.", abstract = "We report here the unexpected detection, and subsequent correction, of a problem that resulted in an increase in lead concentration in the drinking water of an animal research facility. At the initiation of a study, analysis of a water sample obtained from the drinking spout of an animal cage revealed a lead concentration nearly twice the Environmental Protection Agency's maximum acceptable concentration. Because the municipal water supply routinely had been tested and found to be free of lead, it was assumed that this contamination was within the animal care facility. It was hypothesized that the brass fitting connecting the drinking spout to a polyvinyl chloride (PVC) pipe was the source of contamination. Water samples were obtained hourly from 0700 to 1600 hours before and after replacement of the brass fitting with a PVC fitting. After this change, lead concentrations in all samples were within acceptable limits. Although blood lead concentrations were undetectable in 47 rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) housed in the facility, subclinical lead toxicosis could have resulted and potentially complicated studies in which these monkeys were used. We recommend that the water supply of research facilities be monitored periodically.", }