Tatu C A, Orem W H, Finkelman R B, Feder G L
Forslys Group, Timisoara, Romania.
Environ Health Perspect. 1998 Nov;106(11):689-700. doi: 10.1289/ehp.106-1533478.
Balkan endemic nephropathy (BEN) has attracted increasing attention as a possible environmental disease, and a significant amount of research from complementary scientific fields has been dedicated to its etiology. There are two actual competing theories attempting to explain the cause of this kidney disease: 1) the mycotoxin hypothesis, which considers that BEN is produced by ochratoxin A ingested intermittently in small amounts by the individuals in the endemic regions, and 2) the Pliocene lignite hypothesis, which proposes that the disease is caused by long-term exposure to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and other toxic organic compounds leaching into the well drinking water from low rank coals underlying or proximal to the endemic settlements. We outline the current developments and future prospects in the study of BEN and differentiate possible factors and cofactors in disease etiology.
巴尔干地方性肾病(BEN)作为一种可能的环境疾病已引起越来越多的关注,来自相关科学领域的大量研究致力于其病因学。目前有两种相互竞争的理论试图解释这种肾病的病因:1)霉菌毒素假说,该假说认为BEN是由流行地区的个体间歇性少量摄入赭曲霉毒素A所致;2)上新世褐煤假说,该假说提出该疾病是由于长期接触多环芳烃和其他有毒有机化合物引起的,这些化合物从流行定居点下方或附近的低阶煤中渗入饮用水中。我们概述了BEN研究的当前进展和未来前景,并区分了疾病病因中可能的因素和辅助因素。