Frontiers of Biomedical Engineering (BENG 100) Professor Saltzman introduces the basic concepts of r...
Frontiers of Biomedical Engineering (BENG 100)Professor Saltzman continues his description of nephro...
Frontiers of Biomedical Engineering (BENG 100) Professor Saltzman continues his description of nephr...
Body Fluid Compartments Lecture 2 Part 3
(June 17, 2009 - Insidermedicine) From the Netherlands - According to research in the Annals of Inte...
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Abstract: Association between renal tubular dysfunction and mortality among residents in a cadmium-polluted area, Nagasaki, Japan. Iwata K, Saito H, Moriyama M, Nakano A. Department of Preventive Medicine and Health Promotion, Nagasaki University School of Medicine. A retrospective cohort study was carried out to clarify the effect of exposure to environmental cadmium (Cd) on mortality. A total of 256 residents aged 50 years or older, living in Sasu, a Cd-polluted area in Tsushima Island in Nagasaki Prefecture, Japan, were followed from July 1979 to February 1989. The expected number of deaths calculated was based on the sex- and age- specific mortality rate in Tsushima Island in 1985. In Sasu residents of both sexes with urinary beta 2-microglobulin (beta 2-m) concentration greater than 1,000 microgram/g creatinine in 1979, observed deaths were greater than expected. However, the p value of the difference was less than 0.05 only in men. The relationships of age, mean blood pressure, urinary beta 2-m and urinary Cd concentration to mortality were examined using Cox's proportional hazards model. Urinary beta 2-m was independently and significantly related to mortality in men but not in women. The results suggest an association between Cd-induced renal tubular dysfunction and mortality. PMID: 1750038 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]