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Metabolism of inorganic arsenic in children with chronic high arsenic exposure in northern Argentina.

This study concerns the metabolism of inorganic arsenic (As) in children in three villages in northern Argentina: San Antonio de los Cobres and Taco Pozo, each with about 200 microg As/l in the drinking water, and Rosario de Lerma, with 0.65 microg As/l. Findings show that the concentrations of As i...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Concha, G, Nermell, B, Vahter, M V
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1998
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1533000/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9618352
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author Concha, G
Nermell, B
Vahter, M V
author_facet Concha, G
Nermell, B
Vahter, M V
author_sort Concha, G
collection PubMed
description This study concerns the metabolism of inorganic arsenic (As) in children in three villages in northern Argentina: San Antonio de los Cobres and Taco Pozo, each with about 200 microg As/l in the drinking water, and Rosario de Lerma, with 0.65 microg As/l. Findings show that the concentrations of As in the blood and urine of the children in the two As-rich villages were on average 9 and 380 microg/l, respectively, the highest ever recorded for children. The concentrations were about 10 and 30 times higher for blood and urine, respectively, than in Rosario de Lerma. Total As in urine was only slightly higher than the sum of metabolites of inorganic As (U-Asmet), i.e., inorganic As, methylarsonic acid (MMA), and dimethylarsinic acid (DMA); this shows that inorganic As was the main form of As ingested. In contrast to previous studies on urinary metabolites of inorganic As in various population groups, the children and women in the present study excreted very little MMA. Thus, there seems to be a polymorphism for the enzymes (methyltransferases) involved in the methylation of As. Interestingly, the children had a significantly higher percentage of inorganic As in urine than the women, about 50% versus 32%. Also, the percentage of inorganic As in the children is considerably higher than in previous studies on children (about 13% in the two studies available) and adults (about 15-25%) in other population groups. This may indicate that children are more sensitive to As-induced toxicity than adults, as the methylated metabolites bind less to tissue constituents than inorganic As. In the children, the percentage inorganic arsenic in urine decreased, and the percentage of DMA increased with increasing U-Asmet, indicating an induction of As methylation with increasing exposure.
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spelling pubmed-15330002006-08-08 Metabolism of inorganic arsenic in children with chronic high arsenic exposure in northern Argentina. Concha, G Nermell, B Vahter, M V Environ Health Perspect Research Article This study concerns the metabolism of inorganic arsenic (As) in children in three villages in northern Argentina: San Antonio de los Cobres and Taco Pozo, each with about 200 microg As/l in the drinking water, and Rosario de Lerma, with 0.65 microg As/l. Findings show that the concentrations of As in the blood and urine of the children in the two As-rich villages were on average 9 and 380 microg/l, respectively, the highest ever recorded for children. The concentrations were about 10 and 30 times higher for blood and urine, respectively, than in Rosario de Lerma. Total As in urine was only slightly higher than the sum of metabolites of inorganic As (U-Asmet), i.e., inorganic As, methylarsonic acid (MMA), and dimethylarsinic acid (DMA); this shows that inorganic As was the main form of As ingested. In contrast to previous studies on urinary metabolites of inorganic As in various population groups, the children and women in the present study excreted very little MMA. Thus, there seems to be a polymorphism for the enzymes (methyltransferases) involved in the methylation of As. Interestingly, the children had a significantly higher percentage of inorganic As in urine than the women, about 50% versus 32%. Also, the percentage of inorganic As in the children is considerably higher than in previous studies on children (about 13% in the two studies available) and adults (about 15-25%) in other population groups. This may indicate that children are more sensitive to As-induced toxicity than adults, as the methylated metabolites bind less to tissue constituents than inorganic As. In the children, the percentage inorganic arsenic in urine decreased, and the percentage of DMA increased with increasing U-Asmet, indicating an induction of As methylation with increasing exposure. 1998-06 /pmc/articles/PMC1533000/ /pubmed/9618352 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Concha, G
Nermell, B
Vahter, M V
Metabolism of inorganic arsenic in children with chronic high arsenic exposure in northern Argentina.
title Metabolism of inorganic arsenic in children with chronic high arsenic exposure in northern Argentina.
title_full Metabolism of inorganic arsenic in children with chronic high arsenic exposure in northern Argentina.
title_fullStr Metabolism of inorganic arsenic in children with chronic high arsenic exposure in northern Argentina.
title_full_unstemmed Metabolism of inorganic arsenic in children with chronic high arsenic exposure in northern Argentina.
title_short Metabolism of inorganic arsenic in children with chronic high arsenic exposure in northern Argentina.
title_sort metabolism of inorganic arsenic in children with chronic high arsenic exposure in northern argentina.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1533000/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9618352
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