Woods J S, Martin M D, Leroux B G
Department of Environmental Health, University of Washington, Seattle 98105, USA.
J Occup Environ Med. 1998 Dec;40(12):1090-101. doi: 10.1097/00043764-199812000-00009.
Porphyrin, mercury, and creatinine levels in single-void urine specimens ("spot samples") were compared with calculated 24-hour urine concentrations among 146 (77 male and 69 female) practicing dentists who are participating in an ongoing study of urinary porphyrin changes as a biomarker of mercury body burden. All subjects had urinary mercury concentrations < or = 5 micrograms/L, a level comparable to that of the general US population and which is below that determined to be associated with mercury-induced changes in urinary porphyrin excretion rates. The results confirmed previous findings of no significant diurnal variation in any of the porphyrin levels normally found in urine or in total porphyrin levels combined among males but describe significant diurnal variations in most porphyrin levels as well as concentrations of total porphyrins combined among females. Similarly, no evidence of large diurnal variation in mercury excretion among males was apparent, whereas significant diurnal variation in the mercury excretion rate among females was found. Creatinine adjustment of porphyrin or mercury concentrations had no significant effect on these findings. Moreover, no evidence of diurnal variation in urinary creatinine excretion among either male or female subjects was obtained, despite substantial between-subject variability in this parameter. These results support the view that spot urine samples may be utilized to derive reasonably accurate estimates of 24-hour porphyrin and mercury excretion rates in male subjects. In contrast, time of day appears to be of considerably greater importance when spot samples are utilized as 24-hour estimates of either porphyrin or mercury excretion rates among females. Additionally, time of day may be an important consideration in studies involving serial (repeated) porphyrin or mercury measurements using spot urine samples, irrespective of gender distribution of study subjects.
在146名(77名男性和69名女性)执业牙医中,比较了单次晨尿样本(“随机样本”)中的卟啉、汞和肌酐水平与计算得出的24小时尿液浓度,这些牙医正在参与一项关于尿卟啉变化作为汞体内负荷生物标志物的正在进行的研究。所有受试者的尿汞浓度≤5微克/升,这一水平与美国普通人群相当,且低于被确定与汞诱导的尿卟啉排泄率变化相关的水平。结果证实了之前的发现,即男性尿液中通常发现的任何卟啉水平或总卟啉水平组合均无显著的昼夜变化,但描述了女性中大多数卟啉水平以及总卟啉浓度组合存在显著的昼夜变化。同样,男性汞排泄无明显昼夜变化的证据,而女性汞排泄率存在显著的昼夜变化。对卟啉或汞浓度进行肌酐校正对这些发现没有显著影响。此外,尽管该参数在受试者之间存在很大差异,但未获得男性或女性受试者尿肌酐排泄昼夜变化的证据。这些结果支持这样一种观点,即随机尿样可用于合理准确地估计男性受试者24小时卟啉和汞的排泄率。相比之下,当随机样本用作女性卟啉或汞排泄率的24小时估计值时,一天中的时间似乎更为重要。此外,在涉及使用随机尿样进行系列(重复)卟啉或汞测量的研究中,无论研究对象的性别分布如何,一天中的时间可能都是一个重要的考虑因素。