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Cadmium, environmental exposure, and health outcomes

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Title: Cadmium, environmental exposure, and health outcomes


1
Cadmium, environmental exposure, and health
outcomes
  • Ben Guo

2
Background
  • Source diet (high rate of soil-to-plant
    transfer)
  • Increased cancer incidence accumulating of
    cadmium
  • Kidney is a specific target for cadmium
    accumulation.

3
  • Safe intake limit 7ug cadmium/week/kg body
    weight (set based on the critical renal cadmium
    concentration between 100-200 ug/g wet weight
    which corresponds to a urinary threshold limit of
    5-10 ug/g creatinine)

4
1.FAO/WHO guidelines for safe intake
  • PTWI provisional tolerable weekly intake
  • PTWI(WHO 1989) 400-500 ug/person/week
  • PTWI(WHO 1989) 7 ug/kg body weight/week
  • Renal cortical cadmium 50ug/g wet weight
    corresponds to urinary cadmium 2ug/g creatinine

5
  • However, kidney effects can be observed at
    urinary cadmium levels lt 0.5 ug/g creatinine
  • Satarug and his colleagues studies suggested
    that the estimated intake of 25-30 ug/day may
    produce adverse kidney effects in about 1of the
    adult population.

6
2.Threshold-based models for safe intake
  • Bench-mark dose (BMD) the exposure level that
    produces a change in a response.
  • Japanese subjects BMDL10 of urinary cadmium is
    0.6-1.2 ug/g creatinine in men and 1.2-3.6 ug/g
    creatinine in women.
  • Swedish women BMD of urinary cadmium is 0.6-1.1
    ug/g creatinine.

7
  • In a word, the tolerable weekly intake for
    cadmium is 2.5 ug/kg body weight, which
    corresponds to 25 ug/day for a person who weighs
    70kg.
  • (European Food Safety Authority 2009)

8
3.Cadmium sources and bioavailability
  • a. Mollusks and crustaceans
  • Cadmium in oysters and shellfish is
    bioavailable and that long-term oyster
    consumption does result in a higher body burden
    of cadmium.

9
  • b. Oilseeds
  • Cadmium in sunflower kernels possess a
    high nephrotoxic potential, they may indicate
    increased sensitivity to cadmium renal toxicity
    in the high sunflower-kernel consumers.

10
  • c. Offal
  • In one study, Haswell-Elkins et al. found
    high cadmium body burden associated with higher
    consumption of turtle liver and kidney.
  • Cadmium levels are higher in liver and
    kidney than in muscle and older animals.

11
4.Cadmium exposure and effects observed
  • a. Kidney and bone
  • 1.chronic high- dose effects
  • mainly affects women and is characterized
    by severely impaired tubular and glomerular
    function and generalized osteomalacia and
    osteoporosis that result in multiple bone
    fractures

12
  • 2.chronic low-dose effects
  • has been linked to tubular impairment
    with a loss of reabsorptive capacity for
    nutrients, vitamins, and minerals.

13
  • 3.current exposure levels
  • compelling evidence has linked tubular
    impairment with urinary calcium loss, rapid bone
    demineralization and osteoporosis.
  • environmental exposure to cadmium may
    constitute the risk factors for chronic kidney
    diseases.

14
  • b. Diabetes
  • c. Diabetic nephropathy
  • d. Hypertension
  • e. Lung disease
  • f. Periodontal tissues disease
  • g. Ocular tissues disease
  • h. Cancer cadmium is classified as a
    cancer-causing agent.

15
5.Cadmium body burden
  • a. Sex and tissue differential cadmium
    accumulation
  • Younger individuals have high rates of
    renal cadmium accumulation.
  • There is a trend for higher cadmium
    content in the kidneys of the female.

16
  • b. Intestinal absorption of metals, body burden
    variability, and metal transporters
  • The possible intestinal absorption rate
    for cadmium is 3-7.
  • The people who had low iron stores
    usually had higher cadmium body burden.

17
6.Conclusions
  • In the past, the wide variation in cadmium body
    burden among people has been attributed to
    cigarette smoking and the high pulmonary
    absorption rates of cadmium in cigarette smoke.
  • This review concerns about safe intake level that
    uses the kidney as the sole target in assessing
    the health risk from ingested cadmium

18
  • The persistence of cadmium in the environment
    requires a long-term approach to minimize human
    exposure through environmental management and
    maintenance of lower cadmium levels wherever
    possible.
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