Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9925381 | International Journal of Hygiene and Environmental Health | 2005 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Results: The R2 of the linear regression model of urinary gold and platinum (ng/l) burden is 0.349 and 0.235, respectively. In both models, the number of teeth with noble metal dental alloy restorations (NMDAR) is the most important exposure pathway. One versus no tooth with NMDAR is associated with an increase of 23.7% in urinary gold and 35.6% in platinum concentration. Chewing gum intensifies the release of gold and platinum from NMDAR: every additional day per week when gum is chewed is associated with an increased gold (5.6%) and platinum (6.9%) burden. Furthermore, elevated urinary gold and platinum concentrations were found for higher creatinine concentrations, more frequent coffee consumption and for people from the upper social class. Gold burden is also increased in people with arthritis. Platinum burden is also increased in people living in western or northern Germany. Traffic-related variables had no significant effect on platinum burden.
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Authors
Jens Benemann, Nils Lehmann, Katja Bromen, Anja Marr, Margarete Seiwert, Christine Schulz, Karl-Heinz Jöckel,