Relations between liver cadmium, cumulative exposure, and renal function in cadmium alloy workers.
Open Access
- 30 November 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by BMJ in Occupational and Environmental Medicine
- Vol. 45 (12) , 793-802
- https://doi.org/10.1136/oem.45.12.793
Abstract
Detailed biochemical investigations of renal function were made on 75 male workers exposed to cadmium and an equal number of referents matched for age, sex, and employment status. The exposed group consisted of current and retired workers who had been employed in the manufacture of copper-cadmium alloy at a single factory in the United Kingdom for periods of up to 39 years and for whom cumulative cadmium exposure indices could be calculated. In vivo measurements of liver and kidney cadmium burden were made on exposed and referent workers using a transportable neutron activation analysis facility. Significant increases in the urinary excretion of albumin, retinol binding protein, beta 2 microglobulin, N-acetylglucosaminidase (NAG), alkaline phosphatase, gamma-glutamyl transferase and significant decreases in the renal reabsorption of calcium, urate, and phosphate were found in the exposed group compared with the referent group. Measures of glomerular filtration rate (GFR) (creatinine clearance, serum creatinine, and beta 2 microglobulin) indicated a reduction in GFR in the exposed population. Many of these tubular and glomerular function indicators were significantly correlated with both cumulative exposure index and liver cadmium burden. Using cumulative exposure index and liver cadmium as estimates of dose, a two phase linear regression model was applied to identify an inflection point signifying a threshold level above which changes in renal function occur. Many biochemical variables fitted this model; urinary total protein, retinol binding protein, albumin, and beta 2 microglobulin gave similar inflection points at cumulative exposure levels of about 1100 y.micrograms/m3 whereas changes in the tubular reabsorption of urate and phosphate occurred at higher cumulative exposure indices. Measures of GFR, although fitting the threshold model did not give well defined inflection points. Fewer variables fitted the two phase model using liver cadmium; those that did gave threshold levels in the range 20.3-55.1 ppm. When cadmium workers with cumulative exposure indices of less than 1100 y.micrograms/m3 were compared with their respective referents only serum beta 2 microglobulin and urinary NAG were significantly increased in the exposed group and these differences were not related to the degree of cadmium exposure.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)This publication has 42 references indexed in Scilit:
- β2‐microglobulinuria among workers previously exposed to cadmium: Follow‐up and dose‐response analysesAmerican Journal of Industrial Medicine, 1985
- The direct determination of cadmium in urine by electrochemical atomic absorption spectrometry with the L'vov platformAnalytica Chimica Acta, 1984
- RENAL DYSFUNCTION IN CADMIUM SMELTERS: RELATION TO IN-VIVO LIVER AND KIDNEY CADMIUM CONCENTRATIONSThe Lancet, 1983
- Urinary beta 2 microglobulin in the biological monitoring of cadmium workers.Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 1981
- A transportable system for the measurement of liver cadmium in vivoPhysics in Medicine & Biology, 1979
- Tubular Control of Glomerular Filtration Rate in Single NephronsCanadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology, 1975
- Cadmium-Its in vivo detection in manPhysics in Medicine & Biology, 1975
- Estimation of Glomerular Filtration Rate from Plasma Clearance of 51-Chromium Edetic AcidArchives of Disease in Childhood, 1972
- The Plasma Proteins in Normal UrineNature, 1960
- EMPHYSEMA AND PROTEINURIA IN MEN CASTING COPPER-CADMIUM ALLOYSOccupational and Environmental Medicine, 1955