Nutritional factors are known to influence metabolism and toxicity of several metals in animal experiments, but relevant human data are scarce and inconclusive. In this work, we tested the hypothesis that dietary calcium influences lead metabolism in humans. Blood lead concentrations were used as indicators of lead exposure and metabolism. Two groups of peasant women living in similar conditions in two different regions in Yugoslavia (100 in each) were chosen as subjects for this purpose. In region A, the dietary calcium intake was about 940 mg, and in region B about two times lower, i.e., 450 mg/day. The average blood lead concentration was significantly lower in women from region A (69 micrograms/L) than from region B (83 micrograms/L). Our results support the assumption that adequate calcium intake might be one of the preventive measures for decreasing lead absorption. This new evidence, sought for some time by nutritionists and toxicologists, needs further international confirmation.
The influence of sex and dietary calcium on whole-body retention of orally administered 115mCdCl2 has a half-life of 43 days, distinguishing it from 115Cd of half-life 2.3 days was studied in one-year-old control and gonadectomized male and female rats. Gonadectomy was performed at the age of four months. Each of the four experimental groups was divided into three subgroups that were fed rat food with a different calcium content (2.4, 0.7, and 0.3% Ca) throughout the experiment. Regardless of sex and gonadectomy the mean percent values of 115mCd retention in the whole body decreased with increasing dietary calcium level. Male rats retained less cadmium than all other experimental groups of animals. These data clearly point out that sex and diet might influence the level of ingested cadmium in the body.
In this study, the relative crystal growth rate (Vcr) of calcium oxalate (Caox) and a number of other parameters were determined in 17-h daily (d) and 7-h nocturnal fractions (n) of whole urine from 20 recurrent Caox stone formers (SF) and 29 age-matched male normal controls (NC). Vcr, which was determined by the gel crystallization method (GCM), showed the largest difference between SF and NC among all parameters under investigation. Mean values (+/- SD) obtained for Vcr were: 0.73 +/- 0.58 (SF-d)/0.21 +/- 0.22 (NC-d; P less than 0.001) and 0.63+/- 0.58 (SF-n)/0.24 +/- 0.25 (NC-n; P less than 0.01). Significantly higher concentrations of Ca and lower concentrations of thermodynamic and kinetic effectors of Caox crystal growth were responsible for the higher crystal growth rates observed in SF as compared with NC, i.e., they should be partially causative in Caox urolithiasis. However, other properties of urine or the urinary tract (potentially, crystal agglomeration and adhesion) must be accounted for in the genesis of Caox stones.
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