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Both the environment and genes are important for concentrations of cadmium and lead in blood.

Concentrations of cadmium and lead in blood (BCd and BPb, respectively) are traditionally used as biomarkers of environmental exposure. We estimated the influence of genetic factors on these markers in a cohort of 61 monozygotic and 103 dizygotic twin pairs (mean age = 68 years, range = 49-86). BCd...

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Autores principales: Björkman, L, Vahter, M, Pedersen, N L
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2000
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1638287/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10964791
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author Björkman, L
Vahter, M
Pedersen, N L
author_facet Björkman, L
Vahter, M
Pedersen, N L
author_sort Björkman, L
collection PubMed
description Concentrations of cadmium and lead in blood (BCd and BPb, respectively) are traditionally used as biomarkers of environmental exposure. We estimated the influence of genetic factors on these markers in a cohort of 61 monozygotic and 103 dizygotic twin pairs (mean age = 68 years, range = 49-86). BCd and BPb were determined by graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrophotometry. Variations in both BCd and BPb were influenced by not only environmental but also genetic factors. Interestingly, the genetic influence was considerably greater for nonsmoking women (h(2) = 65% for BCd and 58% for BPb) than for nonsmoking men (13 and 0%, respectively). The shared familial environmental (c(2)) influence for BPb was 37% for men but only 3% for women. The association between BCd and BPb could be attributed entirely to environmental factors of mutual importance for levels of the two metals. Thus, blood metal concentrations in women reflect not only exposure, as previously believed, but to a considerable extent hereditary factors possibly related to uptake and storage. Further steps should focus on identification of these genetic factors and evaluation of whether women are more susceptible to exposure to toxic metals than men.
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spelling pubmed-16382872006-11-17 Both the environment and genes are important for concentrations of cadmium and lead in blood. Björkman, L Vahter, M Pedersen, N L Environ Health Perspect Research Article Concentrations of cadmium and lead in blood (BCd and BPb, respectively) are traditionally used as biomarkers of environmental exposure. We estimated the influence of genetic factors on these markers in a cohort of 61 monozygotic and 103 dizygotic twin pairs (mean age = 68 years, range = 49-86). BCd and BPb were determined by graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrophotometry. Variations in both BCd and BPb were influenced by not only environmental but also genetic factors. Interestingly, the genetic influence was considerably greater for nonsmoking women (h(2) = 65% for BCd and 58% for BPb) than for nonsmoking men (13 and 0%, respectively). The shared familial environmental (c(2)) influence for BPb was 37% for men but only 3% for women. The association between BCd and BPb could be attributed entirely to environmental factors of mutual importance for levels of the two metals. Thus, blood metal concentrations in women reflect not only exposure, as previously believed, but to a considerable extent hereditary factors possibly related to uptake and storage. Further steps should focus on identification of these genetic factors and evaluation of whether women are more susceptible to exposure to toxic metals than men. 2000-08 /pmc/articles/PMC1638287/ /pubmed/10964791 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Björkman, L
Vahter, M
Pedersen, N L
Both the environment and genes are important for concentrations of cadmium and lead in blood.
title Both the environment and genes are important for concentrations of cadmium and lead in blood.
title_full Both the environment and genes are important for concentrations of cadmium and lead in blood.
title_fullStr Both the environment and genes are important for concentrations of cadmium and lead in blood.
title_full_unstemmed Both the environment and genes are important for concentrations of cadmium and lead in blood.
title_short Both the environment and genes are important for concentrations of cadmium and lead in blood.
title_sort both the environment and genes are important for concentrations of cadmium and lead in blood.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1638287/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10964791
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