Gregus Z, Klaassen C D
Toxicol Appl Pharmacol. 1986 Aug;85(1):24-38. doi: 10.1016/0041-008x(86)90384-4.
Fecal (0-4 days), urinary (0-4 days), and biliary (0-2 hr) excretion and tissue distribution of 18 metals were examined in rats after iv administration. Total (fecal + urinary) excretion was relatively rapid (over 50% of dose in 4 days) for cobalt, silver, and manganese; was between 50 and 20% for copper, thallium, bismuth, lead, cesium, gold, zinc, mercury, selenium, and chromium; and was below 20% for arsenic, cadmium, iron methyl mercury, and tin. Feces was the predominant route of excretion for silver, manganese, copper, thallium, lead, zinc, cadmium, iron, and methyl mercury whereas urine was the predominant route of excretion for cobalt, cesium, gold, selenium, and chromium; while both excretion routes were equally important for bismuth, mercury, arsenic, and tin. Biliary excretion seems to be an important determinant for the fecal excretion of silver, arsenic, manganese, copper, selenium, cadmium, lead, bismuth, cobalt, and methyl mercury. Between 45 (silver) and 0.8% (methyl mercury) of the dosages administered of these metals was excreted into bile in 2 hr, and they exhibited high bile/plasma concentration ratios. The biliary excretion of copper, selenium, lead, and chromium did not increase proportionally with dosage, suggesting that the hepatobiliary transport of these metals is saturable. The fraction of dosage excreted into bile was independent of the dosage for silver, arsenic, manganese, bismuth, methyl mercury, mercury, gold, cesium, thallium, and tin, but markedly increased with increase in dosage of cadmium, cobalt, zinc, and iron. The latter phenomenon is probably due to saturation of hepatic (cadmium, zinc) or extrahepatic (iron) metal-binding sites. Comparison of biliary and fecal excretion rates indicates that arsenic and selenium undergo intestinal reabsorption, whereas thallium and zinc enter the feces also by non-biliary routes. Most of the metals reached the highest concentration in liver and kidney. However, there was no direct relationship between the distribution of metals to these excretory organs and their primary route of excretion.
静脉注射给药后,在大鼠体内检测了18种金属的粪便(0 - 4天)、尿液(0 - 4天)和胆汁(0 - 2小时)排泄情况以及组织分布。钴、银和锰的总(粪便 + 尿液)排泄相对较快(4天内超过剂量的50%);铜、铊、铋、铅、铯、金、锌、汞、硒和铬的总排泄量在50%至20%之间;而砷、镉、铁甲基汞和锡的总排泄量低于20%。粪便是银、锰、铜、铊、铅、锌、镉、铁和甲基汞的主要排泄途径,而尿液是钴、铯、金、硒和铬的主要排泄途径;铋、汞、砷和锡的两种排泄途径同等重要。胆汁排泄似乎是银、砷、锰、铜、硒、镉、铅、铋、钴和甲基汞粪便排泄的重要决定因素。这些金属给药剂量的45%(银)至0.8%(甲基汞)在2小时内排入胆汁,且它们表现出高胆汁/血浆浓度比。铜、硒、铅和铬的胆汁排泄量并不随剂量成比例增加,这表明这些金属的肝胆转运是可饱和的。排入胆汁的剂量分数与银、砷、锰、铋、甲基汞、汞、金、铯、铊和锡的剂量无关,但随着镉、钴、锌和铁剂量的增加而显著增加。后一种现象可能是由于肝脏(镉、锌)或肝外(铁)金属结合位点饱和所致。胆汁和粪便排泄率的比较表明,砷和硒会发生肠道重吸收,而铊和锌也通过非胆汁途径进入粪便。大多数金属在肝脏和肾脏中达到最高浓度。然而,金属在这些排泄器官中的分布与其主要排泄途径之间没有直接关系。