نتایج جستجو برای: methylmercury mehg

تعداد نتایج: 2505  

2008
Minoru Yoshida Natsuki Shimizu Megumi Suzuki Chiho Watanabe Masahiko Satoh Kouki Mori Akira Yasutake

BACKGROUND Although a long latency period of toxicity after exposure to methylmercury (MeHg) is known to exist in humans, few animal studies have addressed this issue. Substantiation of delayed MeHg toxicity in animals would affect the risk evaluation of MeHg. OBJECTIVES Our goal in this study was to demonstrate the existence of a latency period in a rodent model in which the toxicity of peri...

Journal: :Molecular pharmacology 2002
Albert S Koh Tracey A Simmons-Willis John B Pritchard Steven M Grassl Nazzareno Ballatori

N-Acetylcysteine (NAC) and dimercaptopropanesulfonate (DMPS) are sulfhydryl-containing compounds that produce a dramatic acceleration of urinary methylmercury (MeHg) excretion in poisoned animals, but the molecular mechanism for this effect is unknown. NAC and DMPS are themselves excreted in urine in high concentrations. The present study tested the hypothesis that the complexes formed between ...

Journal: :Environmental science & technology 2014
Martin Tsz-Ki Tsui Joel D Blum Jacques C Finlay Steven J Balogh Yabing H Nollet Wendy J Palen Mary E Power

Mercury (Hg) is widely distributed in the environment, and its organic form, methylmercury (MeHg), can extensively bioaccumulate and biomagnify in aquatic and terrestrial food webs. Concentrations of MeHg in organisms are highly variable, and the sources in natural food webs are often not well understood. This study examined stable isotope ratios of MeHg (mass-dependent fractionation, as δ(202)...

Journal: :Environmental research communications 2021

Mercury methylation, where inorganic mercury (Hg) is converted to methylmercury (MeHg), can increase in soils when flooded. While effects of the initial flooding on MeHg production have been well studied, less known about impacts re-flooding production. Lake Perez, an impounded recreational reservoir Appalachian Highlands, was completely drained then re-filled 7 years later. We use a combinatio...

Journal: :Journal of environmental monitoring : JEM 2004
Eric J Wyse Marina Coquery Sabine Azemard Stephen J de Mora

An estuarine sediment sample, IAEA-405, was recently characterised for trace elements and methylmercury (MeHg) for ultimate use as a marine reference material. The reference values were calculated using data sets from 120 laboratories that participated in a world-wide intercomparison exercise. The data evaluation is highlighted, and includes comparisons of different analytical methods, as well ...

Journal: :Environmental toxicology and chemistry 2009
Evan M Adams Peter C Frederick Iske L V Larkin Louis J Guillette

Methylmercury (MeHg) is a globally distributed neurotoxin, endocrine disruptor, and teratogen, and its effects on birds are poorly understood, especially within an environmentally relevant exposure range. In an effort to understand the potential causal relationship between MeHg exposure and endocrine development, we established four dietary exposure groups (0 [control], 0.05, 0.1, and 0.3 mg/kg...

Journal: :Toxicological sciences : an official journal of the Society of Toxicology 2009
Chris N Glover Dongling Zheng Shalini Jayashankar Gillian D Sales Christer Hogstrand Anne-Katrine Lundebye

The greatest source of human exposure to methylmercury (MeHg) is the diet, in particular the consumption of seafood. To investigate the importance of dietary MeHg speciation on neurotoxicity, balb/c mice dams were exposed to MeHgCys (the naturally-occurring salt) and MeHgCl (the laboratory salt), at concentrations up to 4.5 mg/kg, for 11 weeks (inclusive of 3 weeks gestational and 2 weeks post-...

Journal: :Environmental toxicology and chemistry 2012
David C Depew Niladri Basu Neil M Burgess Linda M Campbell Ed W Devlin Paul E Drevnick Chad R Hammerschmidt Cheryl A Murphy Mark B Sandheinrich James G Wiener

Threshold concentrations associated with adverse effects of dietary exposure to methylmercury (MeHg) were derived from published results of laboratory studies on a variety of fish species. Adverse effects related to mortality were uncommon, whereas adverse effects related to growth occurred only at dietary MeHg concentrations exceeding 2.5 µg g(-1) wet weight. Adverse effects on behavior of fis...

Journal: :Toxicological sciences : an official journal of the Society of Toxicology 2007
Natalia Onishchenko Christoffer Tamm Marie Vahter Tomas Hökfelt Jeffrey A Johnson Delinda A Johnson Sandra Ceccatelli

To investigate the long-term effects of developmental exposure to methylmercury (MeHg), pregnant mice were exposed to at 0.5 mg MeHg/kg/day via drinking water from gestational day 7 until day 7 after delivery. The behavior of offspring was monitored at 5-15 and 26-36 weeks of age using an automated system (IntelliCage) designed for continuous long-term recording of the home cage behavior in soc...

2011
Alan H. Stern Leo R. Korn

BACKGROUND Nearly all fish consumption advisories for methylmercury (MeHg) are based only on risk. There is a need to also address benefits, especially those from polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs), in neurodevelopmental function and cardiovascular health. However, because MeHg and PUFA generally act on these same end points, disentangling risk and benefit is challenging. OBJECTIVES We propo...

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