Cobalt Exposure and Cancer Risk
- 1 January 1990
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Critical Reviews in Toxicology
- Vol. 20 (6) , 427-439
- https://doi.org/10.3109/10408449009029330
Abstract
Cobalt is a technically important metal, used mainly as a binder in the hard-metal industry and as a constituent of many alloys. Cobalt compounds are used as drying agents in paints and laquers. Since ancient times, cobalt compounds have been used as coloring agents for pottery, ceramics, and glass. Soluble cobalt salts interfere adversely with cell division, bind irreversibly to nucleic acids in the cell nucleus, induce chromosome aberrations in plants, and are weakly mutagenic in some in vitro tests with cultured animal cells, bacteria, and yeast. Injections or implantation of cobalt metal, cobalt alloys, and cobalt compounds induced local and sometimes metastasizing sarcomas in rats, rabbits, and mice. Mouse is the least susceptible animal. The only published inhalation study with hamsters exposed to CoO aerosols remained non-positive. Indication of possible carcinogenic effects of cobalt alloys or compounds in human populations has arisen from medical use, in hard-metal industries, and at cobalt production. Unfortunately, confounding by nickel and arsenic is a major problem, and the size of most of the investigated populations has been rather small, so none of the investigations alone gives sufficient evidence of a carcinogenic effect in humans, but taken together there is an indication of a carcinogenic potential that should be explored further.Keywords
This publication has 52 references indexed in Scilit:
- Health effects due to occupational exposure to cobalt blue dye among plate painters in a porcelain factory in Denmark.Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health, 1988
- Role of cobalt, iron, lead, manganese, mercury, platinum, selenium, and titanium in carcinogenesis.Environmental Health Perspectives, 1981
- FATAL MYOCARDIAL DISEASE ASSOCIATED WITH INDUSTRIAL EXPOSURE TO COBALTThe Lancet, 1981
- Solubility and cell toxicity of cobalt, zinc and lead.Industrial Health, 1981
- Mutagenicity of metal cations in cultured cells from Chinese hamsterMutation Research/Genetic Toxicology, 1979
- Metal Mutagens and Carcinogens Affect RNA Synthesis Rates in a Distinct MannerScience, 1977
- Infidelity of DNA Synthesis in Vitro: Screening for Potential Metal Mutagens or CarcinogensScience, 1976
- Chromosome damage in human cell cultures induced by metal saltsMutation Research - Fundamental and Molecular Mechanisms of Mutagenesis, 1972
- Cardiomyopathy accompaning industrial cobalt exposure.Heart, 1972
- The effect of cobalt on mitosis in tissue cultureExperimental Cell Research, 1954