Heavy Metal Assessment among Chinese Nonferrous Metal-exposed Workers from the Jinchang Cohort Study

Environmental exposure to heavy metals has been linked to a wide range of human health hazards. We detected the levels of 15 metals in urine samples from 500 representative sub-samples in an ongoing occupational cohort study (Jinchang Cohort) to directly evaluate metal exposure levels. Fifteen metal...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biomedical and environmental sciences 2017-07, Vol.30 (7), p.530-534
Hauptverfasser: YANG, Ai Min, CHENG, Zhi Yuan, PU, Hong Quan, CHENG, Ning, LI, Hai Yan, LIU, Si Min, DING, Jiao, LI, Juan Sheng, HU, Xiao Bin, REN, Xiao Wei, ZHENG, Tong Zhang, BAI, Ya Na
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Environmental exposure to heavy metals has been linked to a wide range of human health hazards. We detected the levels of 15 metals in urine samples from 500 representative sub-samples in an ongoing occupational cohort study (Jinchang Cohort) to directly evaluate metal exposure levels. Fifteen metals, namely As, Ba, Be, Cd, Cs, Cr, Co, Cu, Pb, Mn, Ni, Se, TI, U, and Zn, were detected by inductively coupled plasma quadruple mass spectrometry. The results showed that median creatinine adjustment and geometric mean urinary metal levels were higher in the heavy metal-exposed group, except Se and Zn, than other reported general or occupational populations. Further studies should address the effects of heavy metals on human health.
ISSN:0895-3988
2214-0190
DOI:10.3967/bes2017.070