Literature DB >> 32651944

Association Between Blood Heavy Metal Concentrations and Dyslipidemia in the Elderly.

Xingmeng Zhu1, Yong Fan2, Jie Sheng1, Ling Gu1, Qi Tao1, Rui Huang1, Kaiyong Liu1, Linsheng Yang1, Guimei Chen3, Hongjuan Cao4, Kaichun Li4, Fangbiao Tao1,3, Sufang Wang5.   

Abstract

Our objective was to evaluate the relationship of blood metal levels including strontium, cadmium, lead, vanadium, aluminum, cobalt, and manganese with dyslipidemia in the elderly Chinese population. In this study, stratified cluster sampling was adopted in the elderly in two communities of Lu'an City from June to September 2016, and 1013 participants were finally included. The inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) was used to measure the metals' concentrations in whole blood. After multivariable adjustment, the odds ratios (95% confidence interval [CI]) of dyslipidemia associated with the highest quartile of metal concentrations were 1.32 (0.89 ~ 1.96), 1.28 (0.83 ~ 1.97), 1.86 (1.23 ~ 2.80), 0.80 (0.55 ~ 1.16), 0.76 (0.51 ~ 1.13), 0.76 (0.53 ~ 1.11), and 1.14 (0.78 ~ 1.67) for strontium, cadmium, lead, vanadium, aluminum, cobalt, and manganese, respectively, compared with the lowest quartile. After reducing the dimensionality of metal elements by principal component analysis, we found that the combined exposure of aluminum, cobalt, and vanadium was the protective factor of non-dyslipidemia, while the combined exposure of cadmium, strontium, and lead was the risk factor of dyslipidemia.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Blood metals; Combined exposure; Dyslipidemia

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32651944     DOI: 10.1007/s12011-020-02270-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biol Trace Elem Res        ISSN: 0163-4984            Impact factor:   3.738


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