Bone mineral health is sensitively related to environmental cadmium exposure- experimental and human data
Само за регистроване кориснике
2019
Аутори
Buha, AleksandraJugdaohsingh, R
Matović, Vesna
Bulat, Zorica
Antonijević, Biljana
Kerns, J.G
Goodship, A
Hart, A
Powell, J.J
Чланак у часопису (Објављена верзија)
Метаподаци
Приказ свих података о документуАпстракт
Exposure to cadmium (Cd) is recognised as one of the risk factors for osteoporosis, although critical exposure levels and exact mechanisms are still unknown. Here, we first confirmed that in male Wistar rats challenged orally with 6 different levels of Cd (0.3–10 mg/kg b.w.), over 28 days, there was a direct dose relationship to bone Cd concentration. Moreover, bone mineral content was significantly diminished by ∼15% (p lt 0.0001) plateauing already at the lowest exposure level. For the other essential bone elements zinc (Zn) loss was most marked. Having established the sensitive metrics (measures of Cd exposure), we then applied them to 20 randomly selected human femoral head bone samples from 16 independent subjects. Bone Cd concentration was inversely proportional to trabecular bone mineral density and mineral (calcium) content and Zn content of bone, but not the donor's age. Our findings, through direct bone analyses, support the emerging epidemiological view that bone health, a...djudged by mineral density, is extremely sensitive to even background levels of environmental Cd. Importantly, however, our data also suggest that Cd may play an even greater role in compromised bone health than prior indirect estimates of exposure could reveal. Environmental Cd may be a substantially determining factor in osteoporosis and large cohort studies with direct bone analyses are now merited.
Кључне речи:
Bones / Cadmium / Human samples / Rats / ZincИзвор:
Environmental Research, 2019, 176Издавач:
- Academic Press Inc.
Финансирање / пројекти:
- Унапређење и развој хигијенских и технолошких поступака у производњи намирница животињског порекла у циљу добијања квалитетних и безбедних производа конкурентних на светском тржишту (RS-MESTD-Integrated and Interdisciplinary Research (IIR or III)-46009)
- Medical Research Council of UK (award reference number MR/R005699/1 )
DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2019.108539
ISSN: 0013-9351
WoS: 000483410200067
Scopus: 2-s2.0-85067607089
Институција/група
PharmacyTY - JOUR AU - Buha, Aleksandra AU - Jugdaohsingh, R AU - Matović, Vesna AU - Bulat, Zorica AU - Antonijević, Biljana AU - Kerns, J.G AU - Goodship, A AU - Hart, A AU - Powell, J.J PY - 2019 UR - https://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3250 AB - Exposure to cadmium (Cd) is recognised as one of the risk factors for osteoporosis, although critical exposure levels and exact mechanisms are still unknown. Here, we first confirmed that in male Wistar rats challenged orally with 6 different levels of Cd (0.3–10 mg/kg b.w.), over 28 days, there was a direct dose relationship to bone Cd concentration. Moreover, bone mineral content was significantly diminished by ∼15% (p lt 0.0001) plateauing already at the lowest exposure level. For the other essential bone elements zinc (Zn) loss was most marked. Having established the sensitive metrics (measures of Cd exposure), we then applied them to 20 randomly selected human femoral head bone samples from 16 independent subjects. Bone Cd concentration was inversely proportional to trabecular bone mineral density and mineral (calcium) content and Zn content of bone, but not the donor's age. Our findings, through direct bone analyses, support the emerging epidemiological view that bone health, adjudged by mineral density, is extremely sensitive to even background levels of environmental Cd. Importantly, however, our data also suggest that Cd may play an even greater role in compromised bone health than prior indirect estimates of exposure could reveal. Environmental Cd may be a substantially determining factor in osteoporosis and large cohort studies with direct bone analyses are now merited. PB - Academic Press Inc. T2 - Environmental Research T1 - Bone mineral health is sensitively related to environmental cadmium exposure- experimental and human data VL - 176 DO - 10.1016/j.envres.2019.108539 ER -
@article{ author = "Buha, Aleksandra and Jugdaohsingh, R and Matović, Vesna and Bulat, Zorica and Antonijević, Biljana and Kerns, J.G and Goodship, A and Hart, A and Powell, J.J", year = "2019", abstract = "Exposure to cadmium (Cd) is recognised as one of the risk factors for osteoporosis, although critical exposure levels and exact mechanisms are still unknown. Here, we first confirmed that in male Wistar rats challenged orally with 6 different levels of Cd (0.3–10 mg/kg b.w.), over 28 days, there was a direct dose relationship to bone Cd concentration. Moreover, bone mineral content was significantly diminished by ∼15% (p lt 0.0001) plateauing already at the lowest exposure level. For the other essential bone elements zinc (Zn) loss was most marked. Having established the sensitive metrics (measures of Cd exposure), we then applied them to 20 randomly selected human femoral head bone samples from 16 independent subjects. Bone Cd concentration was inversely proportional to trabecular bone mineral density and mineral (calcium) content and Zn content of bone, but not the donor's age. Our findings, through direct bone analyses, support the emerging epidemiological view that bone health, adjudged by mineral density, is extremely sensitive to even background levels of environmental Cd. Importantly, however, our data also suggest that Cd may play an even greater role in compromised bone health than prior indirect estimates of exposure could reveal. Environmental Cd may be a substantially determining factor in osteoporosis and large cohort studies with direct bone analyses are now merited.", publisher = "Academic Press Inc.", journal = "Environmental Research", title = "Bone mineral health is sensitively related to environmental cadmium exposure- experimental and human data", volume = "176", doi = "10.1016/j.envres.2019.108539" }
Buha, A., Jugdaohsingh, R., Matović, V., Bulat, Z., Antonijević, B., Kerns, J.G, Goodship, A., Hart, A.,& Powell, J.J. (2019). Bone mineral health is sensitively related to environmental cadmium exposure- experimental and human data. in Environmental Research Academic Press Inc.., 176. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envres.2019.108539
Buha A, Jugdaohsingh R, Matović V, Bulat Z, Antonijević B, Kerns J, Goodship A, Hart A, Powell J. Bone mineral health is sensitively related to environmental cadmium exposure- experimental and human data. in Environmental Research. 2019;176. doi:10.1016/j.envres.2019.108539 .
Buha, Aleksandra, Jugdaohsingh, R, Matović, Vesna, Bulat, Zorica, Antonijević, Biljana, Kerns, J.G, Goodship, A, Hart, A, Powell, J.J, "Bone mineral health is sensitively related to environmental cadmium exposure- experimental and human data" in Environmental Research, 176 (2019), https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envres.2019.108539 . .