Bone and Kidney Lesions in Experimental Cadmium Intoxication

Abstract
Young male rats were fed a diet containing cadmium (0, 10, 30, 100, and 300 ppm) so as to morphologically investigate the relationship between bone and kidney lesions caused by experimental cadmium intoxication. In the early stage of the experiment, before the occurrence of kidney lesions, ingeted cadmium caused osteoporotic changes in bone. In later stages, slight pathologic changes in the kdidney occurred in association with urinary excretion of cadmium. However, there was no evidence of osteomalacic change in bone during the 12-week experimental period. These findings suggest that cadmium may act primarily on bone, rather than secondarily through disturbances of the kidneys, which have some protective ability against cadmium intoxication in the early stage of ingestion of the metal.