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  • Erythrocyte ALAD  (1)
  • Key words Inorganic arsenic  (1)
  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-0738
    Keywords: Key words Inorganic arsenic ; Seafood ; Metabolism ; Urinary excretion
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  To assess whether regular consumption of seafood, particularly fish and shellfish, by humans may lead to an overexposure to inorganic arsenic, a well-established human carcinogen, the urinary excretion of the relevant As metabolites (Asi, inorganic form; MMA, monomethylarsonic acid; DMA, dimethylarsinic acid) was compared in groups of subjects with different seafood consumption habits and in volunteers after ingestion of a known amount of seafood arsenicals. Studies of Italian cohorts, involving five groups of ±30 subjects with different seafood consumption habits, and balance studies in Belgian volunteers failed to show a biologically significant absorption of inorganic arsenic either present as such in the food or formed from organoarsenicals during cooking or digestion. The results suggest that the digestion of some seafood, especially mussels, may increase the urinary excretion of the dimethylated arsenic metabolite. Therefore, the biological monitoring of exposure to inorganic arsenic in an industrial context should mainly rely upon specific measurement of the unmetabolized form when recent ingestion of seafood cannot be excluded.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    International archives of occupational and environmental health 37 (1976), S. 89-105 
    ISSN: 1432-1246
    Keywords: Lead ; Lead in blood ; Protoporphyrin in erythrocytes ; Erythrocyte ALAD ; Urinary ALA ; Urinary coproporphyrin ; Correlation ; Regression ; Validity
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary In previous research we established that FEP is a suitable and valid test for evaluating the metabolic damage caused by lead absorption. In this study, in the same sample consisting of adult male subjects with PbB levels ranging from 15 to 150 μg/100 ml, we examined the relationship existing between PbB and the other indicators of effect so as to compare their behavior with that of FEP and establish whether there is a field of application where the erythrocyte metabolite is to be preferred. FEP and ALAD displayed a very much better correlation with PbB than the urinary tests (ALAU and CPU). The decrease in ALAD values is already clear at PbB levels which do not cause an elevation of FEP; on the other hand, when the enzyme is markedly inhibited, the erythrocyte metabolite is elevated further with the increase in the internal lead load. FEP increases earlier compared to ALAU and CPU; nevertheless, the urinary metabolites undergo increasing elevations at PbB levels higher than 90 μg/100 ml when the FEP values have become stable. We confirmed that FEP possesses good predictive validity at PbB levels of 60 and 70 μg/100 ml; for such PbB levels, also ALAD, measured with the European Standardized Method, displayed high validity. Validity of the urinary metabolites was rather modest. FEP was, moreover, well correlated also with other indicators, suggesting that the erythrocyte metabolite may be used to predict both dose and effect.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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