| Literature DB >> 19270785 |
Laura D K Thomas1, Susan Hodgson, Mark Nieuwenhuijsen, Lars Jarup.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Exposure to heavy metals may cause kidney damage. The population living near the Avonmouth zinc smelter has been exposed to cadmium and other heavy metals for many decades.Entities:
Keywords: cadmium; environmental exposure; heavy metals; kidney disease; nephrotoxicants; zinc smelter
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2008 PMID: 19270785 PMCID: PMC2649217 DOI: 10.1289/ehp.11641
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health Perspect ISSN: 0091-6765 Impact factor: 9.031
Figure 1Map showing modeled air Cd concentrations (conc), the six air monitoring sites, and the site of the lead/zinc (Pb/Zn) smelter. Two of the air monitoring sites are within 100 m of each other.
Figure 2Monitored Cd levels as a function of modeled data (note different scales). Lines indicate linear regression and 95% CI (R2 = 0.84).
Mean U-Cd values (nmol/mmol creatinine) in European general populations (including smokers and nonsmokers but excluding occupationally exposed).
| Median U-Cd
| ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Population | Men | Women | Men and women | Reference |
| Men ( | 0.18/0.40 | 0.31/0.46 | 0.25/0.44 | Present study |
| Sweden, OSCAR study (472 women, 311 men, 16–81 years of age) | 0.25/0.42 | 0.42/0.50 | ||
| Germany (4,740 adults, 18–69 years of age) | 0.22/0.29 | |||
| Sweden (820 women, 53–64 years of age) | 0.67 | |||
| Netherlands (290 men and women) | 0.34 | |||
| Belgium, Cadmibel study (1,699 men and women 20–80 years of age) | 0.84 μg/24 hr | |||
Given in μg/L. Creatinine-adjusted values would depend on urine creatinine (U-Crea) concentration, which has a normal range from about 0.3 to 2–3 g/L. Thus, U-Crea = 1 g/L would give the same adjusted value, whereas higher U-Crea concentrations would give lower adjusted values. Commonly, the adjusted values are rather close to the nonadjusted values.
Smokers and nonsmokers combined.
Never-smokers had a U-Cd level of 0.45 μg/g.
Geometric mean based on 24-hr sample.
Multiple regression of ln(U-Cd) as a function of sex, age, ADMS category, and smoking status.
| Variable | β-Value | SE | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Female sex | 0.30 | 0.08 | < 0.001 |
| Age (years) | 0.52 | 0.00 | < 0.001 |
| ADMS category (< 2, 2 to < 3, 3 to < 4, 4 to < 5, 5 to < 6, ≥6 ng/m3 ) | 0.12 | 0.02 | 0.04 |
| Smoking status (never, past, current) | 0.36 | 0.05 | < 0.001 |
All variables were included in the regression model.
Figure 3The association between ln(U-NAG) and ln(U-Cd). Lines indicate linear regression and 95% CI (R2 = 0.14).
Prevalence of U-NAG above reference level (1.25 IU/mmol creatinine) in relation to U-Cd (adjusted for sex).
| U-Cd category (nmol/mmol creatinine) | Mean (nmol/mmol creatinine) | Cases/total (prevalence%) | Odds ratio (95% CI), adjusted for sex |
|---|---|---|---|
| All | |||
| < 0.3 | 0.193 | 4/84 (4.8) | 1 |
| 0.3 to < 0.5 | 0.381 | 6/51 (11.8) | 2.64 (0.70–9.97) |
| ≥ 0.5 | 0.777 | 7/45 (15.6) | 3.64 (0.98–13.5) (test for trend, |
| Excluding current smokers | |||
| < 0.3 | 0.188 | 4/71 (5.6) | 1 |
| 0.3 to < 0.5 | 0.377 | 5/43 (11.6) | 2.32 (0.57–9.4) |
| ≥ 0.5 | 0.730 | 6/31 (19.4) | 4.25 (1.07–16.83) (test for trend, |
| Excluding current and past smokers | |||
| < 0.3 | 0.188 | 4/65 (6.2) | 1 |
| 0.3 to < 0.5 | 0.366 | 2/28 (7.1) | 1.55 (0.24–9.87) |
| ≥ 0.5 | 0.674 | 4/16 (25) | 8.10 (1.31–50.11) (test for trend, |