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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Bone aluminium in haemodialysed patients and in rats injected with aluminium chloride: relationship to impaired bone mineralisation.

H A Ellis, +2 more
- 01 Aug 1979 - 
- Vol. 32, Iss: 8, pp 832-844
TLDR
It is suggested that aluminium retained in the bone of the dialysis patients and the experimental animals interferes with normal mineralisation.
Abstract
Iliac bone aluminium was determined by neutron activation analysis in 34 patients with chronic renal failure and in eight control subjects. In 17 patients treated by haemodialysis there was a significant increase in the amount of aluminium (mean +/- SE = 152 +/- 30 ppm bone ash). In eight patients treated by haemodialysis and subsequent renal transplantation, bone aluminium was still significantly increased (92 +/- 4.5 ppm bone ash) but was less than in the haemodialysed patients. In some patients aluminium persisted in bone for many years after successful renal transplantation. There was no relationship between hyperparathyroidism and bone aluminium. Although no statistically significant relationship was found between the mineralisation status of bone and bone aluminium, patients dialysed for the longest periods tended to be those with the highest levels of aluminium, osteomalacia, and dialysis encephalopathy. In 20 rats given daily intraperitoneal injections of aluminium chloride for periods of up to three months, there was accumulation of aluminium in bone (163 +/- 9 ppm ash) to levels comparable to those obtained in the dialysis patients, and after about eight weeks osteomalacia developed. The increased bone aluminium and osteomalacia persisted after injections had been stopped for up to 49 days, although endochondral ossification was restored to normal. As a working hypothesis it is suggested that aluminium retained in the bone of the dialysis patients and the experimental animals interferes with normal mineralisation.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The chronic toxicity of aluminium, cadmium, mercury, and lead in birds: a review.

TL;DR: It is concluded that significant physiological and biochemical responses to such exposure conditions occur at dietary metal concentrations insufficient to cause signs of overt toxicity, particularly important are reproductive effects which include decreased egg production, decreased hatchability, and increased hatchling mortality.

Renal osteodystrophy

汪关煜
Journal ArticleDOI

Metabolism and possible health effects of aluminum.

TL;DR: A hypothetical model is presented for the metabolism of aluminum, based on documented direct observations of Al3+ and analogies from other ions, and it is proposed that an accumulation may take place at a subcellular level without any significant increase in the corresponding tissue concentration.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The dialysis encephalopathy syndrome. Possible aluminum intoxication.

TL;DR: The fact that brain gray-matter aluminum was higher in all patients with the dialysis-associated encephalopathy syndrome than any of the control subjects or other uremic patients on dialysis suggests that this syndrome may be due to aluminum in intoxication.
Journal ArticleDOI

Composition of the domestic water supply and the incidence of fractures and encephalopathy in patients on home dialysis.

M M Platts, +2 more
- 10 Sep 1977 - 
TL;DR: Patients who undergo dialysis in areas where water contains high aluminium concentrations should be supplied with deionisers, and water supplied to patients with fractures or encephalopathy contained significantly less calcium and fluorine and significantly more aluminium than that piped to patients without these complications.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hyperaluminaemia from aluminum resins in renal failure.

TL;DR: Aluminium resins and salts should be avoided in renal failure until more is known about the possible toxic effects of hyperaluminaemia, and more rigid control of aluminium concentration in dialysis fluids is necessary.
Journal ArticleDOI

Brain-aluminium concentration in dialysis encephalopathy.

TL;DR: The results suggest that dialysis with untreated and/or softened tap-water (aluminium concentration 0.1-1.2 mg/1) makes the major contribution to brain-aluminium levels; Dialysis with deionised water and intake of phosphate-binding AL(OH)3 gel are less important.
Journal ArticleDOI

Aluminium toxicity in rats.

TL;DR: It is recommended that aluminium salts should be withdrawn from use in patients with renal failure and their use restricted in normal persons pending clarification of the issue.
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