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. 1983 Apr;42(6):1726-9.

Cadmium bioavailability

  • PMID: 6832394

Cadmium bioavailability

M R Fox. Fed Proc. 1983 Apr.

Abstract

Cadmium slowly accumulates in the liver and kidney and has a long biological half-life, estimated to be 2-3 decades in the kidney. If the kidney cadmium concentration reaches a critically high level, proximal tubular damage results, which can be followed by severe bone mineral loss. There are only a few measurements of cadmium bioavailability in foods; however, the data are indicative of lower utilization from foods than from inorganic salts. In animal tissues cadmium is bound primarily to a heat-resistant small protein with a high cysteine content (metallothionein), whereas little is known about the form in which cadmium occurs in the edible parts of plants. Low intakes of many nutrients exacerbate the effects of cadmium and supplemental intakes are protective. Newborn and young animals absorb much higher quantities of cadmium than adults. There is some evidence in animals that females may be more adversely affected than males. Itai-itai disease, a painful disease with kidney damage and bone demineralization, occurred in elderly Japanese women who had borne several children and who were exposed to cadmium via food and drinking water. Inasmuch as cadmium in the U.S. food supply affords an estimated safety factor of only 4- to 15-fold, it is important to establish factors that affect the bioavailability of cadmium from foods.

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