| Literature DB >> 27896275 |
Abstract
Exposure to environmental and occupational toxicants is responsible for adverse effects on human health. Chelation therapy is the only procedure able to remove toxic metals from human organs and tissue, aiming to treat damage related to acute and/or chronic intoxication. The present review focuses on the most recent evidence of the successful use of the chelating agent ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA). Assessment of toxic-metal presence in humans, as well as the rationale of EDTA therapy in cardiovascular and neurodegenerative diseases, is reported.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27896275 PMCID: PMC5118545 DOI: 10.1155/2016/8274504
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Target organs/apparatus, sources, and toxic levels for each toxic metal are reported.
| Main target organs or apparatus | Main assimilation way | Toxic levels | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kidney | SNC | Liver | Gastrointestinal system | Respiratory system | Skin | Cardiovascular/hematopoietic system | Oral/nasal mucosa | Musculoskeletal system | Ingestion (I) | ||
| Aluminum | x | x | x | I, IH | 35,00 | ||||||
| Antimony | x | x | x | x | x | x | I, IH, DA | 0,30 | |||
| Arsenic | x | x | x | x | x | x | I, IH | 108,00 | |||
| Barium | x | x | x | x | x | I, IH | 7,00 | ||||
| Beryllium | x | x | x | x | I, IH | 1,00 | |||||
| Bismuth | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | I, IH, DA | 10,00 | ||
| Cadmium | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | I, IH | 0,80 | ||
| Cesium | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | I, IH, DA | 9,00 | ||
| Gadolinium | x | x | x | I | 0,30 | ||||||
| Lead | x | x | x | x | x | x | I, IH, DA | 2,00 | |||
| Mercury | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | I, IH, DA | 3,00 | ||
| Nickel | x | x | x | x | x | I, IH, DA | 10,00 | ||||
| Palladium | x | x | I, DA | 0,30 | |||||||
| Platinum | x | x | x | IH, DA | 1,00 | ||||||
| Tellurium | x | x | x | x | I, IH | 0,80 | |||||
| Thallium | x | x | x | x | I, IH | 0,50 | |||||
| Thorium | x | x | x | I, IH | 0,03 | ||||||
| Tin | x | x | x | I, IH, DA | 9,00 | ||||||
| Titanium | x | x | x | x | x | I, IH, DA | 15,00 | ||||
| Tungsten | x | x | x | I, IH | 0,40 | ||||||
| Uranium | x | x | x | x | x | x | I, IH, DA | 0,03 | |||
The more common symptoms and/or diseases developed following intoxication are reported for each toxic metal. These are a free postediting from Zhou et al. [16].
| Symptoms and diseases | |
|---|---|
| Aluminum | Fatigue, hypophosphatemia, increased prothrombin time, and porphyria. |
| Antimony | Nausea, anorexia, metallic taste, fatigue, and muscle weakness. Hypotension, cardiac pain (like angina pectoris), and faulty ventricular polarization. Irritation of respiratory tissues, pneumoconiosis. “Antimony spots” on the skin. |
| Arsenic | Fatigue, malaise. Eczema or allergic-like dermatitis. Skin hypopigmentation, white striae on fingernails, hair loss, and stomatitis. Increased salivation and garlic-like breath. Peripheral neuropathy. Myocardial damage, hemolysis, and aplastic anemia with leukopenia. |
| Barium | Tingling in the extremities, abnormal reflexes, and paralysis. Vomiting, diarrhea. Arrhythmia, hypertension. Respiratory arrest/failure. |
| Beryllium | Hypoproteinemia, anemia. Liver and kidney damage. Chest pain, cough, and fatigue. |
| Bismuth | Constipation or bowel irregularity, colitis. Foul breath. Skin pigmentation changes and gum pigmentation (blue-black), gingivitis, and stomatitis. Erythema and skin sores, irritation of mucous membranes. Nephritis, nephrosis, and hepatitis. “Bismuth encephalophy” with mental confusion, clumsiness, myoclonic jerks, tremors, and dysarthria (osteoarthropathy). |
| Cadmium | Hypertension. Microcytic-hypochromic anemia (not responsive to iron supplementation). Proteinuria with abnormally high excretion of beta-2 microglobulin. |
| Cesium | Ventricular arrhythmias, cardiotoxicity. Headache, nausea, and epileptic seizures. |
| Gadolinium | Abdominal cramps, diarrhea. Lethargy, muscular spasms, and respiratory collapse. Irritation of the skin and eyes. |
| Lead | Loss of appetite, constipation. Poor hemoglobin synthesis, anemia. Nephrotoxic effects with impaired renal excretion of uric acid. Tremors, neuropathy, and encephalopathy. |
| Mercury | Decreased senses of touch, hearing, vision, and taste, metallic taste in mouth. Fatigue or lack of physical endurance. Increased salivation. Anorexia, numbness and paresthesias, headaches, irritability, and excitability. Tremors and incoordination, psychoses, and manic behaviors. Anemia. Hypertension. |
| Nickel | Headache, vertigo. Muscle weakness. Nausea, vomiting. Palpitations. Itchy skin and dermatitis, eczema. Panallergy with asthma, conjunctivitis, rhinitis, and sinusitis. |
| Palladium | Skin, eye, and respiratory irritation and allergic contact dermatitis. |
| Platinum | Nausea, vomiting. Dyspnea and wheezing. Dermatitis, development of chronic allergic reactions (“platinosis”). Nephrosis. Anemia, thrombocytopenia, and leukopenia. |
| Tellurium | Eye and respiratory irritation. Drowsiness, headache. Dry mouth, metallic taste, garlic-like odor of breath, sweat, and urine. Abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, and anorexia. Respiratory depression. Circulatory collapse. Bluish/black patches on the skin. |
| Thallium | Nausea, gastrointestinal distress, diarrhea, and weight loss. Proteinuria. Fatigue. Mental confusion, memory loss, psychoses, and peripheral neurological signs: paresthesias, myalgias, tremor, and ataxia. Hair loss with sparing of pubic and body hair and a lateral fraction of eyebrows, alopecia. |
| Thorium | Respiratory distress and pneumonia, pulmonary hypertension, and fibrosis. |
| Tin | Reduced sense of smell, headache, fatigue, ataxia, and muscle weakness. Irritation of contacted tissues (eyes, skin, bronchial tubes, or gastrointestinal tract). |
| Titanium | Chest tightness and respiratory difficulty. Eye skin irritation. Neuroinflammation by titanium dioxide nanoparticles. Hypersensitivity reaction. |
| Tungsten | Lung diseases (pneumoconiosis, cancer). Eczema, pruritus, folliculitis, and neurodermatitis. |
| Uranium | Fatigue. Hair loss, alopecia, and dermatitis. Increased locomotor activity. Perturbation of the sleep-wake cycle, decreased memory, and increased anxiety. |
Characteristics of chelating agents used in clinical practice.
| Route of administration | Adult dose | Route of metal complex excretion | Side effects | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BAL | IM | 5 mg/kg/day | Urine, bile, faeces, lungs | Nausea, vomiting, hypertension, tachycardia, headache |
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| Deferiprone | Oral | 50–100 mg/kg/day | Urine | CNS toxicity, lenticular opacities, arthropathy |
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| Deferoxamine | IV | 50 mg/kg/day | Urine | Nausea, weight loss, ocular toxicity |
| Subcutaneously | 20 mg/kg/day | |||
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| Deferasirox | Oral | 35 mg/kg/day | Faeces, urine | Abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, elevation of liver enzymes |
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| DMPS | Oral | 300 mg three times a day | Urine | Rash, nausea, leukopenia |
| IV | until 1500 mg/day | |||
| IM | 20 mg/kg/day | |||
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| DMSA | Oral | 30 mg/kg/day | Urine, bile, faeces, lungs | Gastrointestinal disorders (GI), skin rashes, flu-like symptoms |
| IV | 10 mg/kg three times a day | |||
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| EDTA | IV | 2 gr/week | Urine | None |
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| D-Penicillamine | Oral | 5–20 mg/kg/day | Urine | Degenerative dermopathy, thromboleukocytopenia, GI |
When used once a week at the dose reported and intravenously injected in about 2 hours.
DMPS: 2,3-dimercapto-1-propane sulphonic acid.
DMSA: meso-2,3-dimercaptosuccinic acid.
EDTA: CaNa2 ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid.
Figure 1Toxic-metal levels measured in the patient's urine collected during the 12 hours following EDTA “challenge” (chelation test) reported in micrograms (μg) per g creatinine. The 48-year-old female patient was affected by multiple sclerosis.
Figure 2Toxic-metal levels measured in the patient's urine collected during the 12 hours following EDTA “challenge” (chelation test) reported in micrograms (μg) per g creatinine. The 61-year-old male patient was affected by idiopathic progressive spastic paraparesis.