1.Heavy metal poisoning and renal injury in children.
Li-Ping RONG ; Yuan-Yuan XU ; Xiao-Yun JIANG
Chinese Journal of Contemporary Pediatrics 2014;16(4):325-329
Along with global environmental pollution resulting from economic development, heavy metal poisoning in children has become an increasingly serious health problem in the world. It can lead to renal injury, which tends to be misdiagnosed due to the lack of obvious or specific early clinical manifestations in children. Early prevention, diagnosis and intervention are valuable for the recovery of renal function and children's good health and growth. This paper reviews the mechanism of renal injury caused by heavy metal poisoning in children, as well as the clinical manifestations, diagnosis, and prevention and treatment of renal injury caused by lead, mercury, cadmium, and chromium.
Cadmium Poisoning
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Child
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Chromium
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poisoning
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Heavy Metal Poisoning
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Humans
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Kidney Diseases
;
chemically induced
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Lead Poisoning
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Mercury Poisoning
;
Poisoning
;
complications
2.Association between Prenatal Exposure to Cadmium and Atopic Dermatitis in Infancy.
Ja Hyeong KIM ; Kyoung Sook JEONG ; Eun Hee HA ; Hyesook PARK ; Mina HA ; Yun Chul HONG ; Soo Jeong LEE ; Kyung Yeon LEE ; Joseph JEONG ; Yangho KIM
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2013;28(4):516-521
Our objective was to evaluate the relationship between intrauterine exposure to cadmium and the presence of atopic dermatitis in infants 6 months of age, adjusted for covariates including exposure to other heavy metals. The present research is a component of the Mothers' and Children's Environmental Health (MOCEH) study, a multi-center birth cohort project conducted in Korea. Study subjects were restricted to pregnant women in whom cadmium and lead levels were measured at delivery and whose infants were assessed for the presence of atopic disease at 6 months of age. The odds ratio (OR) for the presence of atopic dermatitis in 6-month-old infants whose cord blood had elevated cadmium levels, after adjustment for other covariates, was 2.350 (95% CI, 1.126-4.906). The OR for the presence of atopic dermatitis in infants whose cord blood had elevated lead levels was not significant. In the present study, the cord blood cadmium level was significantly associated with the presence of atopic dermatitis in 6-month-old infants; this was not true of the cord blood lead level. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first prospective study to show a relationship between prenatal exposure to cadmium and atopic dermatitis in infancy.
Adult
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Cadmium/analysis
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Cadmium Poisoning/*complications
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Cohort Studies
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Dermatitis, Atopic/diagnosis/*etiology
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Female
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Fetal Blood/chemistry
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Gestational Age
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Humans
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Infant
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Lead/analysis/toxicity
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Male
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Odds Ratio
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Pregnancy
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Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects
3.Hospital-based screening to detect patients with cadmium nephropathy in cadmium-polluted areas in Japan.
Toru SASAKI ; Hyogo HORIGUCHI ; Akira ARAKAWA ; Etsuko OGUMA ; Atsushi KOMATSUDA ; Kenichi SAWADA ; Katsuyuki MURATA ; Kazuhito YOKOYAMA ; Takehisa MATSUKAWA ; Momoko CHIBA ; Yuki OMORI ; Norihiro KAMIKOMAKI
Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine 2019;24(1):8-8
BACKGROUND:
In health examinations for local inhabitants in cadmium-polluted areas, only healthy people are investigated, suggesting that patients with severe cadmium nephropathy or itai-itai disease may be overlooked. Therefore, we performed hospital-based screening to detect patients with cadmium nephropathy in two core medical institutes in cadmium-polluted areas in Akita prefecture, Japan.
METHODS:
Subjects for this screening were selected from patients aged 60 years or older with elevated serum creatinine levels and no definite renal diseases. We enrolled 35 subjects from a hospital in Odate city and 22 from a clinic in Kosaka town. Urinary ß-microglobulin and blood and urinary cadmium levels were measured.
RESULTS:
The criteria for renal tubular dysfunction and the over-accumulation of cadmium were set as a urinary ß-microglobulin level higher than 10,000 μg/g cr. and a blood cadmium level higher than 6 μg/L or urinary cadmium level higher than 10 μg/g cr., respectively. Subjects who fulfilled both criteria were diagnosed with cadmium nephropathy. Six out of 57 patients (10.5% of all subjects) had cadmium nephropathy.
CONCLUSIONS:
This hospital-based screening is a very effective strategy for detecting patients with cadmium nephropathy in cadmium-polluted areas, playing a complementary role in health examinations for local inhabitants.
REGISTRATION NUMBER
No. 6, date of registration: 6 June, 2010 (Akita Rosai Hospital), and No. 1117, date of registration: 26 December, 2013 (Akita University).
Aged
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Aged, 80 and over
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Cadmium
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adverse effects
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urine
;
Cadmium Poisoning
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blood
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complications
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urine
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Creatinine
;
urine
;
Environmental Exposure
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adverse effects
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Environmental Monitoring
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Environmental Pollutants
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adverse effects
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urine
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Female
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Hospitals
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Humans
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Japan
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Kidney Diseases
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chemically induced
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urine
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Male
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Middle Aged
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Sex Distribution