| Literature DB >> 25863025 |
Samuel J Cobbina1, Yao Chen1, Zhaoxiang Zhou2, Xueshan Wu2, Ting Zhao2, Zhen Zhang1, Weiwei Feng3, Wei Wang3, Qian Li4, Xiangyang Wu5, Liuqing Yang6.
Abstract
Humans are exposed to a cocktail of heavy metal toxicants in the environment. Though heavy metals are deleterious, there is a paucity of information on toxicity of low dose mixtures. In this study, lead (Pb) (0.01mg/L), mercury (Hg) (0.001mg/L), cadmium (Cd) (0.005mg/L) and arsenic (As) (0.01mg/L) were administered individually and as mixtures to 10 groups of 40 three-week old mice (20 males and 20 females), for 120 days. The study established that low dose exposures induced toxicity to the brain, liver, and kidney of mice. Metal mixtures showed higher toxicities compared to individual metals, as exposure to low dose Pb+Hg+Cd reduced brain weight and induced structural lesions, such as neuronal degeneration in 30-days. Pb+Hg+Cd and Pb+Hg+As+Cd exposure induced hepatocellular injury to mice evidenced by decreased antioxidant activities with marginal increases in MDA. These were accentuated by increases in ALT, AST and ALP. Interactions in metal mixtures were basically synergistic in nature and exposure to Pb+Hg+As+Cd induced renal tubular necrosis in kidneys of mice. This study underlines the importance of elucidating the toxicity of low dose metal mixtures so as to protect public health.Entities:
Keywords: Low dose; Metal mixture; Multivariate; Oxidative stress; Toxicity
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25863025 DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2015.03.057
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hazard Mater ISSN: 0304-3894 Impact factor: 10.588