Enzymuria in a population living near a cadmium battery plant

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Abstract

Objectives - To study the body burden of cadmium and signs of tubular dysfunction in a rural population living near a closed nickel cadmium battery plant. Methods - Cadmium and N-acetyl-β- glucosaminidase (NAG) in urine were measured in 72 subjects who lived close to the plant. Results - Residents living close to the plant had higher median urinary cadmium concentrations than those living farther away (1.01 v 0.46 nmol/mmol creatinine) and than a control group (0.2 nmol/mmol creatinine). There was a significant correlation between urinary cadmium and the excretion of NAG in urine as we]l as signs of tubular dysfunction in residents who excreted urinary cadmium above 0.5 nmol/mmol creatinine. Conclusion - Tubular dysfunction may appear in environmentally exposed subjects at lower cadmium body burdens than previously anticipated.

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Jarup, L., Carlsson, M. D., Elinder, C. G., Hellstrom, L., Persson, B., & Schutz, A. (1995). Enzymuria in a population living near a cadmium battery plant. Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 52(11), 770–772. https://doi.org/10.1136/oem.52.11.770

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