首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Absorption and elimination of trivalent and hexavalent chromium in humans following ingestion of a bolus dose in drinking water
Authors:BD Kerger  DJ Paustenbach  GE Corbett  BL Finley
Affiliation:McLaren/Hart-ChemRisk, Irvine, California 92606, USA.
Abstract:These studies investigate the magnitude and valence state of chromium absorbed following plausible drinking water exposures to chromium(VI). Four adult male volunteers ingested a single dose of 5 mg Cr (in 0.5 liters deionized water) in three choromium mixtures: (1) Cr(III) chloride (CrCl3), (2) potassium dichromate reduced with orange juice (cr(III)-OJ); and (3) potassium dichromate [Cr(VI)]. Blood and urine chromium levels were followed for 1-3 days prior to and up to 12 days after ingestion. The three mixtures showed quite different pharmacokinetic patterns. CrCl3 was poorly absorbed (estimated 0.13% bioavailability) and rapidly eliminated in urine (excretion half-life, approximately 10 hr), whereas Cr(III)-OJ was absorbed more efficiently (0.60% bioavailability) but more slowly (half-life, approximately 17 hr), and Cr(VI) had the highest bioavailability (6.9%) and the longest half-life (approximately 39 hr). All three chromium mixtures caused temporary elevations in red blood cell (RBC) and plasma chromium concentrations, but the magnitude and duration of elevation showed a clear trend (Cr(VI) > Cr(III)-OJ > CrCl3). The data suggest that nearly all the ingested Cr(VI) was reduced to Cr(III) before entering the bloodstream based on comparison to RBC and plasma chromium patterns in animals exposed to high doses of Cr(VI). These findings support our prior work which suggests that water-soluble organic complexes of Cr(III) formed during the reduction of Cr(VI) in vivo explain the patterns of blood uptake and urinary excretion in humans at drinking water concentrations of 10 mg/liter or less.
Keywords:
本文献已被 PubMed 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号