January 2009
·
14 Reads
Experimental Biology and Medicine
This page lists works of an author who doesn't have a ResearchGate profile or hasn't added the works to their profile yet. It is automatically generated from public (personal) data to further our legitimate goal of comprehensive and accurate scientific recordkeeping. If you are this author and want this page removed, please let us know.
January 2009
·
14 Reads
Experimental Biology and Medicine
December 2008
·
5 Reads
Experimental Biology and Medicine
August 2008
·
1,630 Reads
·
232 Citations
Experimental Biology and Medicine
Mercury is a major toxic metal ranked top in the Toxic Substances List. Cinnabar, which contains mercury sulfide, has been used in Chinese traditional medicines for thousands of years as an ingredient in various remedies, and 40 cinnabar-containing traditional medicines are still used today. Little is known about toxicology profiles or toxicokinetics of cinnabar and cinnabar-containing traditional medicines, and the high mercury content in these Chinese medicines raises justifiably escalations of public concern. This minireview, by searching the available database of cinnabar and by comparing cinnabar with common mercurials, discusses differences in their bioavailability, disposition, and toxicity. The analysis showed that cinnabar is insoluble and poorly absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract. Absorbed mercury from cinnabar is mainly accumulated in the kidneys, resembling the disposition pattern of inorganic mercury. Heating cinnabar results in release of mercury vapor, which in turn can produce toxicity similar to inhalation of these vapors. The doses of cinnabar required to produce neurotoxicity are 1000 times higher than methyl mercury. Following long-term use of cinnabar, renal dysfunction may occur. Dimercaprol and succimer are effective chelation therapies for general mercury intoxication including cinnabar. Pharmacological studies of cinnabar suggest sedative and hypnotic effects, but the therapeutic basis of cinnabar is still not clear. In summary, cinnabar is chemically inert with a relatively low toxic potential when taken orally. In risk assessment, cinnabar is less toxic than many other forms of mercury, but the rationale for its inclusion in traditional Chinese medicines remains to be fully justified.
... It has also been shown that mercury ingested by human is oxidized in the gastrointestinal tract to mercury salts (e.g., such as mercury chloride), which show increased circulatory absorption in the body and can further exert toxic effects on the central nervous system, gastrointestinal tract, and kidneys [8]. Mercury chloride, one of the extremely toxic mercury salts, is an important disinfectant and raw chemical material [9,10], and its production and utilization inevitably result in leakage into the water environment. It has also been shown that even at low concentrations, mercury can adversely affect the growth, development, and reproduction of marine organisms [11]. ...
August 2008
Experimental Biology and Medicine