| Literature DB >> 34245728 |
Diane B Re1, Markus Hilpert2, Brianna Saglimbeni3, Madeleine Strait3, Vesna Ilievski4, Maxine Coady5, Maria Talayero4, Kai Wilmsen5, Helene Chesnais6, Olgica Balac4, Ronald A Glabonjat4, Vesna Slavkovich4, Beizhan Yan7, Joseph Graziano4, Ana Navas-Acien4, Norman J Kleiman8.
Abstract
Despite a recent increase in e-cigarette use, the adverse human health effects of exposure to e-cigarette aerosol, especially on the central nervous system (CNS), remain unclear. Multiple neurotoxic metals have been identified in e-cigarette aerosol. However, it is unknown whether those metals accumulate in the CNS at biologically meaningful levels. To answer this question, two groups of mice were whole-body exposed twice a day, 5 days a week, for two months, to either a dose of e-cigarette aerosol equivalent to human secondhand exposure, or a 5-fold higher dose. After the last exposure, the olfactory bulb, anterior and posterior frontal cortex, striatum, ventral midbrain, cerebellum, brainstem, remaining brain tissue and spinal cord were collected for metal quantification by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry and compared to tissues from unexposed control mice. The two-month exposure caused significant accumulation of several neurotoxic metals in various brain areas - for some metals even at the low exposure dose. The most striking increases were measured in the striatum. For several metals, including Cr, Cu, Fe, Mn, and Pb, similar accumulations are known to be neurotoxic in mice. Decreases in some essential metals were observed across the CNS. Our findings suggest that chronic exposure to e-cigarette aerosol could lead to CNS neurotoxic metal deposition and endogenous metal dyshomeostasis, including potential neurotoxicity. We conclude that e-cigarette-mediated metal neurotoxicity may pose long-term neurotoxic and neurodegenerative risks for e-cigarette users and bystanders.Entities:
Keywords: Aerosol exposure; Brain; Metal accumulation; Metals; Neurotoxicity; e-cigarette
Year: 2021 PMID: 34245728 DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2021.111557
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Res ISSN: 0013-9351 Impact factor: 6.498