Literature DB >> 21170808

Renal effects of exposure to natural and depleted uranium: a review of the epidemiologic and experimental data.

Xabier Arzuaga1, Susan H Rieth, Ambika Bathija, Glinda S Cooper.   

Abstract

Elevated levels of naturally occurring uranium in groundwater have been found in small geographic areas throughout the world. Relevant research was reviewed pertaining to natural and depleted uranium (DU) exposure and nephrotoxicity, including epidemiologic community-based and occupational studies, studies of Gulf War veterans exposed to DU, and experimental studies in animals. Occupational cohort studies do not provide evidence of an increased risk of kidney-related mortality among uranium-exposed workers. However, occupational and community-based studies of populations chronically exposed to elevated drinking-water concentrations of uranium provide some evidence of adverse renal effects, as assessed by biomarkers of proximal tubule damage such as urinary levels of glucose, calcium, and various low-molecular-weight proteins. Indications of proximal tubule effects, as evidenced by increased urinary β(2)-microglobulin and retinol binding protein levels, were also seen in the most recent follow-up surveillance study of Gulf War veterans exposed to DU. The reported β(2)-microglobulin levels in these studies were generally considered to be within normal limits, but the long-term implications of the observed variation in these levels are not established. The kidney was observed to be a target of uranium toxicity following oral and implantation exposure routes in several animal species. The interpretation and importance of the observed changes in biomarkers of proximal tubule function are important questions that indicate the need for additional clinical, epidemiological, and experimental research.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 21170808     DOI: 10.1080/10937404.2010.509015

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Toxicol Environ Health B Crit Rev        ISSN: 1093-7404            Impact factor:   6.393


  14 in total

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5.  Uranium associations with kidney outcomes vary by urine concentration adjustment method.

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6.  Uranium and arsenic unregulated water issues on Navajo lands.

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Review 7.  Toxic environmental exposures and kidney health in children.

Authors:  Darcy K Weidemann; Virginia M Weaver; Jeffrey J Fadrowski
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Review 9.  Renal Effects and Carcinogenicity of Occupational Exposure to Uranium: A Meta-Analysis.

Authors:  Leonhard Stammler; Andreas Uhl; Benjamin Mayer; Frieder Keller
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10.  Zebrafish exposure to environmentally relevant concentration of depleted uranium impairs progeny development at the molecular and histological levels.

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