Royal Society of Chemistry по журналам "Metal Ions in Toxicology"
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(The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2011)Organisms in the environment experience exposure to mixtures of metals as a rule rather than an exception. Observational as well as experimental evidence shows that such coexposure may give rise to combined effects that ...
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(The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2011)Several individual metals including aluminum, arsenic, cadmium, lead, manganese, and mercury were demonstrated to affect the neurological system. Metals are ubiquitous in the environment. Environmental and occupational ...
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(The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2011)Many metal ions lead, mercury, arsenic, cadmium, chromium, nickel, vanadium, copper, lithium exert a wide variety of adverse effects on reproduction and development, including influence on male and female subfertility or ...
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(The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2011)Observations of specific interactions of the heavy metal cadmium with the estrogen receptor have spawned a series of studies to investigate the propensity of this and other heavy metals to act as estrogen mimicks. There ...
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(The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2011)The purpose of this review is to provide a reader with a brief account of current results and views in the area of genotoxicity of metal ions, with a special attention to underlying chemical mechanisms. The text is divided ...
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(The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2011)Metals have been in the environment during the entire evolution of man and the use of metals is key to human civilization. Nonetheless, several very toxic species are included in the metallic elements and compounds either ...
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(The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2011)Humans are exposed to a number of heavy metals such as cadmium, mercury and its organic form methylmercury, uranium, lead, and other metals as well as metalloids, such as arsenic, in the environment, workplace, food, and ...
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(The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2011)For communities generally and for persons living in the vicinity of waste sites specifically, potential exposures to chemical mixtures are genuine concerns. Such concerns often arise from perceptions of a site's higher ...
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(The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2011)Some metals, such as copper and manganese, are essential to life and play irreplaceable roles in, e.g., the functioning of important enzyme systems. Other metals are xenobiotics, i.e., they have no useful role in human ...
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(The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2011)In the present context, metal ions can be categorized into several classes including those that are essential for life and those that have no known biological function and thus can be considered only as potentially hazardous. ...
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(The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2011)This chapter provides a succinct summary of the nephrotoxic effects of a number of metalsmetalloids on an individual or mixture basis. There is a discussion of routes of exposure, mechanisms of uptake by renal cells and ...
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(The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2011)Many metals are essential elements and necessary for proper biological function at low intake levels. However, exposure to high intake levels of these metals may result in adverse effects. In addition, exposures to mixtures ...
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(The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2011)Certain heavy metals have been reported to seriously affect the immune system potentially resulting in a broad range of harmful health effects. Reported alterations in immune cell function include a variety of affected ...
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(The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2011)The skin and eyes remain in constant exposure to the surrounding environment and are subject to accidental, occupational, and biological risks at all times. Normal development, homeostasis, and repair following injury ...
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