22 research outputs found

    Human Health Risk Assessment For Arsenic: A Critical Review

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    Millions of people are exposed to arsenic resulting in a range of health implications.This paper provides an up-to-date review of the different sources of arsenic (water, soil and food), indicators of human exposure (biomarker assessment of hair, nail, urine and blood), epidemiological and toxicological studies on carcinogenic and non-carcinogenic health outcomes, and risk assessment approaches. The review demonstrates a need for more work evaluating the risks of different arsenic species such as; arsenate, arsenite monomethylarsonic acid, monomethylarsonous acid, dimethylarsinic acid and dimethylarsinous acid as well as a need to better integrate the different exposure sources in risk assessments

    Acetylation once and twice: A new wrinkle

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    Metabolic profiling of body fluids by proton NMR: self-poisoning episodes with paracetamol (acetaminophen)

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    1H NMR spectra of urine and plasma from subjects who had taken paracetamol (acetaminophen) at a therapeutic dose or in self-poisoning episodes (both fatal and nonfatal) are compared. They provide convenient metabolic profiles. For overdose cases, intense resonances corresponding to high levels of both drug and endogenous metabolites are observed. The ratios of glucuronide to sulfate conjugates are unusually high in urine from overdose cases. Elevated levels of the cysteinyl and N-acetyl cysteinyl conjugates reflect increased glutathione conjugation in the liver. The observed excretion of high levels of amino acids by overdose subjects is suggestive of drug-induced hepatic damage. No resonances for drug metabolites are detected in plasma samples. However, characteristic and abnormally intense resonances for the amino acids Phe, Tyr, His, Gin, Pro, Ala, Val, Lys, Met, Ser, and Thr are indicative of severe liver failure and disruption of normal deamination and transamination processes
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