Essential and toxic element concentrations in blood and urine and their associations with diet: Results from a Norwegian population study including high-consumers of seafood and game

Birgisdottir, BE; Knutsen, HK; Haugen, M; Gjelstad, IM; Jenssen, MTS; Ellingsen, DG; Thomassen, Y; Alexander, J; Meltzer, HM; Brantsæter, AL

HERO ID

1797812

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2013

Language

English

PMID

23867847

HERO ID 1797812
In Press No
Year 2013
Title Essential and toxic element concentrations in blood and urine and their associations with diet: Results from a Norwegian population study including high-consumers of seafood and game
Authors Birgisdottir, BE; Knutsen, HK; Haugen, M; Gjelstad, IM; Jenssen, MTS; Ellingsen, DG; Thomassen, Y; Alexander, J; Meltzer, HM; Brantsæter, AL
Journal Science of the Total Environment
Volume 463-464
Page Numbers 836-844
Abstract The first aim of the study was to evaluate calculated dietary intake and concentrations measured in blood or urine of essential and toxic elements in relation to nutritional and toxicological reference values. The second aim was to identify patterns of the element concentrations in blood and urine and to identify possible dietary determinants of the concentrations of these elements. Adults with a known high consumption of environmental contaminants (n=111), and a random sample of controls (n=76) answered a validated food frequency questionnaire (FFQ). Complete data on biological measures were available for 179 individuals. Blood and urine samples were analyzed for selenium, iodine, arsenic, mercury, cadmium and lead. Principal component analysis was used to identify underlying patterns of correlated blood and urine concentrations. The calculated intakes of selenium, iodine, inorganic arsenic and mercury were within guideline levels. For cadmium 24% of the high consumer group and 8% of the control group had intakes above the tolerable weekly intake. Concentrations of lead in blood exceeded the bench-mark dose lower confidence limits for some participants. However, overall, the examined exposures did not give rise to nutritional or toxicological concerns. Game consumption was associated with lead in blood (Bln 0.021; 95%CI:0.010, 0.031) and wine consumption. Seafood consumption was associated with urinary cadmium in non-smokers (Bln 0.009; 95%CI:0.003, 0.015). A novel finding was a distinct pattern of positively associated biological markers, comprising iodine, selenium, arsenic and mercury (eigenvalue 3.8), reflecting seafood intake (B 0.007; 95%CI:0.004, 0.010). The study clearly demonstrates the significance of seafood as a source of both essential nutrients and toxic elements simultaneously and shows that exposure to various essential and toxic elements can be intertwined.
Doi 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2013.06.078
Pmid 23867847
Wosid WOS:000325831200093
Url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84880596381&doi=10.1016%2fj.scitotenv.2013.06.078&partnerID=40&md5=149f8af876e3458af2fa32799b1d89d6
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword Arsenic; Mercury; Cadmium; Lead; Selenium; Iodine