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      Pharmacokinetics and Toxicity of Bismuth Compounds

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      Medical Toxicology and Adverse Drug Experience
      Springer Nature

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          Metabolism and possible health effects of aluminum.

          P Ganrot (1986)
          Literature regarding the biochemistry of aluminum and eight similar ions is reviewed. Close and hitherto unknown similarities were found. A hypothetical model is presented for the metabolism, based on documented direct observations of Al3+ and analogies from other ions. Main characteristics are low intestinal absorption, rapid urinary excretion, and slow tissue uptake, mostly in skeleton and reticuloendothelial cells. Intracellular Al3+ is probably first confined in the lysosomes but then slowly accumulates in the cell nucleus and chromatin. Large, long-lived cells, e.g., neurons, may be the most liable to this accumulation. In heterochromatin, Al3+ levels can be found comparable to those used in leather tannage. It is proposed that an accumulation may take place at a subcellular level without any significant increase in the corresponding tissue concentration. The possible effects of this accumulation are discussed. As Al3+ is neurotoxic, the brain metabolism is most interesting. The normal and the lethally toxic brain levels of Al3+ are well documented and differ only by a factor of 3-10. The normal brain uptake of Al3+ is estimated from data on intestinal uptake of Al3+ and brain uptake of radionuclides of similar ions administered intravenously. The uptake is very slow, 1 mg in 36 years, and is consistent with an assumption that Al3+ taken up by the brain cannot be eliminated and is therefore accumulated. The possibility that Al3+ may cause or contribute to some specific diseases, most of them related to aging, is discussed with the proposed metabolic picture in mind.
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            Campylobacter pyloridis-associated chronic active antral gastritis

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              The concentration and distribution of some stable elements in healthy human tissues from the United Kingdom An environmental study

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Medical Toxicology and Adverse Drug Experience
                Med Toxicol Adverse Drug Exp
                Springer Nature
                0113-5244
                1179-1942
                October 1989
                November 2012
                : 4
                : 5
                : 303-323
                Article
                10.1007/BF03259915
                6ff03f0d-065a-4cdc-83ef-eb0fa23b16b7
                © 1989
                History

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