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美国 2007-2008 年成年人血液和尿液中的金属含量以及甲状腺功能。

Metals in blood and urine, and thyroid function among adults in the United States 2007-2008.

机构信息

National Center for Environmental Assessment, Office of Research and Development, United States Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, DC, USA.

出版信息

Int J Hyg Environ Health. 2013 Nov;216(6):624-32. doi: 10.1016/j.ijheh.2012.08.005. Epub 2012 Oct 6.

Abstract

The thyroid is integral to regulation of development and metabolism. Certain metals have been shown to affect thyroid function in occupationally exposed persons, but few studies have been conducted in the general population. This study evaluates the association between biomarkers of metal exposure and thyroid hormones in the US population. Analyses included adults participating in the 2007-2008 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, with no history of thyroid disease or use of thyroid medications, and with data on metals in blood (lead, cadmium and mercury) and urine (lead, cadmium, mercury, barium, cobalt, cesium, molybdenum, antimony, thallium, tungsten and uranium), and thyroid hormones (TSH, free and total T3 and T4) in serum (N=1587). Multivariate linear regression was used to model the association between thyroid hormone levels, and metals in either urine (creatinine-adjusted) or blood. Metal concentrations were considered as both continuous and categorical variables. Models were adjusted for: age, sex, race, BMI, serum lipids, serum cotinine, pregnancy and menopausal status, and use of selected medications. Few participants (<5%) had free T3, free T4, or TSH levels outside the reference range. However, 9.2% (SE=1.2%) had low T3 and 9.4% (SE=1.1%) had low T4. Metals were detected in nearly all blood and urine samples, with the highest levels seen for urinary molybdenum (median 42.5μg/L). When including all blood metals, mercury was associated with decreases in T3 and T4, while cadmium was associated with decreased TSH. Urinary cadmium was associated with increases in both T3 and T4 (models including all metals measured in urine). Urinary thallium and barium were associated with decreased T4 (both) and T3 (barium). For TSH, cesium was associated with decreased, and tungsten with increased levels. Given the high prevalence of exposure to metals, associations of the size reported here could indicate an appreciable contribution of metals exposure to the prevalence of thyroid disorders. These findings indicate the importance of further research to further examine these relationships.

摘要

甲状腺对发育和代谢的调节至关重要。某些金属已被证明会影响职业暴露人群的甲状腺功能,但在普通人群中进行的研究很少。本研究评估了美国人群中金属暴露生物标志物与甲状腺激素之间的关联。分析包括参加 2007-2008 年全国健康和营养检查调查的成年人,他们没有甲状腺疾病或使用甲状腺药物史,并且有血液(铅、镉和汞)和尿液(铅、镉、汞、钡、钴、铯、钼、锑、铊、钨和铀)中金属以及血清中甲状腺激素(TSH、游离和总 T3 和 T4)的数据(N=1587)。使用多元线性回归模型来模拟甲状腺激素水平与尿液(肌酐校正)或血液中金属之间的关联。金属浓度被视为连续和分类变量。模型调整了:年龄、性别、种族、BMI、血清脂质、血清可替宁、妊娠和绝经状态,以及使用选定药物。很少有参与者(<5%)的游离 T3、游离 T4 或 TSH 水平超出参考范围。然而,9.2%(SE=1.2%)的人 T3 水平低,9.4%(SE=1.1%)的人 T4 水平低。几乎所有血液和尿液样本中都检测到了金属,尿液钼的含量最高(中位数为 42.5μg/L)。当包括所有血液金属时,汞与 T3 和 T4 降低有关,而镉与 TSH 降低有关。尿液中的镉与 T3 和 T4 升高有关(包括尿液中测量的所有金属的模型)。尿液中的铊和钡与 T4(两者)和 T3(钡)降低有关。对于 TSH,铯与降低水平有关,而钨与升高水平有关。鉴于金属接触的高流行率,这里报告的大小的关联可能表明金属接触对甲状腺疾病流行率有相当大的贡献。这些发现表明需要进一步研究来进一步检查这些关系。

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