A ribbing yarn

Sofia Zaichick of the Department of Immunology and Microbiology, at Northwestern University, in Chicago, and her father Vladimir Zaichick of the Department of Radionuclide Diagnostics, in the Medical Radiological Research Centre of Russian Academy of Medical Sciences, in Obninsk, describe analyses of rib bones. They used instrumental neutron activation analysis (INAA) and ICP spectrometry to analyse the intact rib-bone post mortem of 84 previously healthy 15–58 year-old citizens of a non-industrial region in the Central European part of Russia. They applied statistical methods to observe any effect of age and gender on major, minor and trace element content of the bone.

Of the 92 natural chemical elements in the periodic table, not counting those from which human tissues are mainly composed, including carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen, they demonstrated the presence of 44 additional elements. Among them are toxic elements, such as aluminium, arsenic, samarium and thallium, as well as the trace elements necessary for life, including calcium, iron, magnesium and phosphorus.

"Bone is a tissue in which the turnover of these elements, particularly those that have an affinity for bone, is extremely slow and their biological half-lives are estimated to be from few years to decades," the team explains. "This gives bone several important features as a subject of environmental monitoring."

The amount of any particular element in bone at a given time correlates with a person's intake or exposure to that element over a period of years. For elements with a strong affinity for bone, then accumulation is higher than in other tissues and so can reveal even low-level exposure after a long period. Moreover, given that the skeleton constitutes much of our body mass, the element level in bone may reflect total body content. "Bone is therefore a suitable index medium for evaluation of low-level and long-term exposure and the body burden of toxic bone-seeking elements," the team adds.

The current research paper provides a base line for bone analysis of a wide range of elements that might now be monitored in terms of environmental and dietary exposure in which gender, age, domicile and other factors are taken into account.

User Rating: / 1
PoorBest 

Latest Comments

  • Rakesh Kanda said More...
    Dr Alfonso,

    Matrix suppression is ... 3 months ago
  • Dr Robson JCF Afonso said More...
    Dear Authors,

    As you sad atmospheric... 3 months ago
  • Dr Robson JCF Afonso said More...
    I am glad to hearing someone question... 11 months ago
  • Peter Jenks said More...
    That is a reason I\'d overlooked - po... 11 months ago
  • Stephen Boonstoppel said More...
    I think one of the biggest obstacles ... 11 months ago

Contents Alerts

Receive updates whenever a new issue of Spectroscopy Europe is published. Just enter your e-mail address:

RSS Feeds

News News Products Products Webinars Webinars

Follow Spectroscopy on Twitter