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Methodological evaluation of method for dietary heavy metal intake.

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TLDR
Considering the above-mentioned menace, efforts should be focused on the estimation of dietary intakes of potential toxic agents by consumers, and an analytical technique with sufficient sensitivity is required for the accurate determination of these chemicals in food samples.
Abstract
Exposure to environmental pollutants is an important problem of environmental toxicology. Heavy metals are regarded as toxic to living organisms because of their tendency to accumulate in selected tissues. Moreover, their presence is a causative agent of various sorts of disorders, including neuro-, nephro-, carcino-, terato-, and immunological. Exposures of human to environmental chemicals can occur simultaneously from various sources. One exposure route is ingestion of hazardous chemicals through contaminated food and beverages. Considering the above-mentioned menace, efforts should be focused on the estimation of dietary intakes of potential toxic agents by consumers. Dietary exposure assessment to nonnutrients is usually performed by combining 2 sets of data—the concentration of elemental contaminants in various food products and the consumption data of these food items. A variety of approaches exist for evaluating exposure to food chemicals, and the method chosen is influenced, among others, by the intended goal, the availability of data, cost, and time frame. Moreover, it is also important to note how accurate and detailed the information concerning toxic elements intake needs to be. There are a number of sources of food consumption data currently used in exposure assessments, which range from 1 d to habitual intake. Frequently, the heavy metals for which dietary exposure is of interest are present in trace and ultra-trace quantities. Hence, an analytical technique with sufficient sensitivity is required for the accurate determination of these chemicals in food samples. It is important to remember that the accuracy of quantitative analysis is strongly dependent on the sampling and preparation steps.

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Citations
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A review of soil heavy metal pollution from mines in China: pollution and health risk assessment.

TL;DR: A comprehensive assessment of soil heavy metal pollution derived from mines in China is provided, while identifying policy recommendations for pollution mitigation and environmental management of these mines.
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Contamination features and health risk of soil heavy metals in China

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Human health risk from soil heavy metal contamination under different land uses near Dabaoshan Mine, Southern China.

TL;DR: Investigating heavy metal contamination near Dabaoshan Mine using sequential indicator simulation to delineate the spatial patterns of soil data, and fitting multiple linear regression models for heavy metal uptake by crops, indicates that Cd is the most important pollutant contributing to the human health risk.
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Heavy metal pollution and health risk assessment of agricultural soils in a typical peri-urban area in southeast China.

TL;DR: The integrated method of ecological and health risk index, which takes consideration of both anthropogenic emission and cropping system can provide a practical tool for evaluating of agricultural soil in the peri-urban area regrading different risk factors.
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Heavy metal toxicity: An update of chelating therapeutic strategies

TL;DR: Heavy metal poisoning is a common health problem because of mining, smelting, industrial, agricultural and sewage waste, but it can be efficiently excreted from the body following treatment with proper chelation agents.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A global perspective on cadmium pollution and toxicity in non-occupationally exposed population

TL;DR: In this paper, levels of cadmium found in major food groups are highlighted together with levels found in liver and kidney samples from non-occupationally exposed populations, suggesting that renal toxicity may be an early warning of complications, sub-clinical or clinical morbidity.
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Toxic and essential metal interactions

TL;DR: Calcium deficiency along with low dietary magnesium may contribute to aluminum-induced degenerative nervous disease, and cadmium and aluminum interact with calcium in the skeletal system to produce osteodystrophies.
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Arsenic geochemistry and health

TL;DR: The impact of arsenic on the immune system is outlined, whose alteration could lead to viral/bacterial infections and possible controls are outlined.
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Cases of mercury exposure, bioavailability, and absorption.

TL;DR: Six cases representing various forms of exposure to different species of mercury are examined, and the methodological issues in estimating exposure, bioavailability and absorption are indicated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Concentrations of arsenic, cadmium, mercury, and lead in common foods and estimated daily intake by children, adolescents, adults, and seniors of Catalonia, Spain

TL;DR: Dietary intakes of As, Cd, Hg, and Pb by the population of Catalonia are currently well below the respective PTWIs and provisional tolerable weekly intake (PTWI).
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