at. wt. 26.98; at. no. 13; valence 3. Discovered by
Wöhler in 1827. Obtained from cryolite (double sod. and aluminum fluoride) or
bauxite (native aluminum hydroxide) by electrolysis in electric furnace.
Tin-white, malleable, ductile metal, with somewhat bluish tint; capable of
taking brilliant polish which is retained in dry air. In moist air gradually
oxidizes superficially. Available in bars, leaf, powder, sheets or wire. d.
2.70. m. 660°. b. 1800°. Does not vaporize even at high temps., but finely
divided aluminum dust is easily ignited, and may cause explosions. Soluble in
dil. HCl, H2SO4, in soln. KOH and NAOH with evolution of
hydrogen; almost insoluble in HNO3 or acetic acid when hot.
Reduces the cations of many heavy metals to the metallic state. Solns. of the
metal in dil. HCl or neutral or slightly acid solns. of most aluminum salts,
yield with Na2S a white ppt. soluble in excess of Na2S.
Dil. neutral soln. of aluminum salts yield white gelatinous ppt. on boiling with
sod. acetate.
Use: As the pure metal or as alloys (magnalium, aluminum bronze, etc.) for
aircraft, utensils, apparatus, electrical conductors; instead of copper in
dental alloys. The coarse powder is used in aluminothermics (thermite process);
the fine powder as flashlight in Photography, in explosives, fireworks and in
aluminum paints; for absorbing occluded gases in manuf. of steel. In testing for
Au, As, Hg; coagulating colloidal solns. of As or Sb; pptg. Cu; reducer for
determining nitrates and nitrites; instead of Zn for generating hydrogen in
testing for As.
Grades available: Reagent, technical.
Med. Use: Inhalation of finely divided aluminum dust proposed as a means of
"binding" silica to prevent and reverse lung changes caused by silica dust.
Aluminum Toxicity
The following information was compiled and
submitted by Frank Hartman.
"From the earliest days of food regulation, the use of alum (aluminum
sulphate) in foods has been condemned. It is universally acknowledged as a
poison in all countries. If the Bureau of Chemistry had been permitted to
enforce the law ... no food product in the country would have any trace of ...
any aluminum or saccarin. No soft drink would contain caffeine or hebromin; no
bleached flour would be in interstate commerce. Our food and drugs would be
wholly without adulteration ... and the health of our people would be vastly
improved and their life greatly extended."
From History of crime against the Food Laws (1929) by Dr. Wiley, the prime
mover behind the original Pure Food Law and Director of the FDA. He resigned in
disgust in 1912 over exceptions granted to the law and lack of enforcement.
Aluminum has been exempted from tesitng for safety by the FDA under a
convoluted logic wherein it is classified as GRAS. (Generally Regarded As Safe.)
It has never been tested by the FDA on its safety and there are NO restrictions
whatever on the amount or use of aluminum.
There are over 2000 references in the National Library of Medicine on adverse
effects of alumium. The following were extracted to provide a small sample of
the range of toxicity of aluminum.
Chemical Registry
Aluminum toxicity has been recognized in many settings where exposure is
heavy or prolonged, where renal function is limited, or where apreviously
accumulated bone burden is released in stress or illness. Toxicity may include:
encephalopathy (stuttering, gait disturbance, myoclonic jerks, seizures, coma,
abnormal EEG) osteomalacia or aplastic bone disease ( associated with painful
spontaneous fractures, hypercalcemia, tumorous calcinosis ) proximal myopathy,
increased risk of infection, increased left ventricular mass and decreased
myocardial function microcytic anemia with very high levels, sudden death.
Aluminum is ubiquitous in our environment; it is the third most prevalent
element in the earth's crust. The gastrointestinal tract is relatively
impervious to aluminum, absorption normally being only about 2%. Aluminum is
absorbed by a mechanism related to that for calcium. Gastric acidity and oral
citrate favors absorption, and H2-blockers reduce absorption. As is true for
several trace elements, transferrin is the primary protein binder and carrier
for aluminum in the plasma, where 80% is protein bound and 20% is free or
complexed to small molecules such as citrate.
Cells appear to take up aluminum from transferrin rather than from citrate.
Purified preparations of ferritin from brain and liver have been found to
contain aluminum.
It is not known if ferritin has a specific binding site for aluminum. Factors
regulating the migration of aluminum across the bloodbrain barrier are not well
understood.
Serum aluminum correlates with encephalopathy; red cell aluminum correlates
with microcytic anemia, and bone aluminum correlates with aluminum bone disease.
Basal PTH when elevated appears to protect bone and thereby favor CNS
toxicity.
Other factors favoring one form of toxicity over another are not well
understood.
Aluminum toxicity has been reported to impair the formation and release of
parathyroid hormone. The parathyroid glands concentrate aluminum above levels in
surrounding tissues. Treatment of aluminum toxicity in renal failure patients
often reactivates hyperparathyroidism, which to a certain extent is helpful for
bone remodeling and healing.
Distilled water was placed in metal containers and the amount of the "Metal
Can" that disolved into the distilled water was measured daily using Specific
Conductance readings. You can divide the SC number by 2 to get the approxamite
amount of atoms in ppm ( mg / l ).
4 ppm of aluminum in human blood can cause it to colagulate.
Aluminum in humans is documented to Inhibit Learning. See
Below ...
Aluminum neurotoxicity in preterm infants receiving intravenous-feeding
solutions.
Bishop N.J. Morley R. Day J.P. Lucas A.
From: N Engl J Med (1997 May 29) 336(22):1557-61
Aluminum, a contaminant of commercial intravenousfeeding solutions, is
potentially neurotoxic. We investigated the effect of perinatal exposure to
intravenous aluminum on the neurologic development of infants born prematurely.
RESULTS: The 90 infants who received the standard feeding solutions had a
mean (± SD) Bayley Mental Development Index of 95 ±22, as compared with 98 ±20
for the 92 infants who received the aluminum-depleted solutions (P=0.39). The
former were significantly more likely (39 percent, vs. 17 percent of the latter
group; P=0.03) to have a Mental Development Index of less than 85, increasing
their risk of subsequent educational problems. For all 157 infants without
neuromotor impairment, increasing aluminum exposure was associated with a
reduction in the Mental Development Index (P=0.03), with an adjusted loss of one
point per day of intravenous feeding for infants receiving the standard
solutions. In preterm infants, prolonged intravenous feeding with solutions
containing aluminum is associated with impaired neurologic development.
Aluminum-containing emboli in infants treated with extracorporeal membrane
oxygenation.
Vogler C. Sotelo-Avila C. Lagunoff D. Braun P. Schreifels J.A.
Weber T.
From: N Engl J Med (1988 Jul 14) 319(2):75-9
We found fibrin thrombi or thromboemboli at autopsy in 22 of 23 infants with
respiratory failure who had been treated with venoarterial extracorporeal
membrane oxygenation (ECMO). In addition, distinctive basophilic
aluminum-containing emboli were found in 12 of the infants; the distribution of
these emboli was similar to that of the thromboemboli, except that an
aluminum-containing embolus was found in a lung in only 1 infant. Sixteen
infants had pulmonary thrombi or thromboemboli. We also found friable
aluminum-containing concretions adhering loosely to the mixing rods of heat
exchangers that had been used to warm the blood flowing through the ECMO
circuit; such concretions were not present on unused mixing rods. We propose
that these aluminum-containing concretions developed as the silicone coating of
the heat exchanger wore away and aluminum metal was exposed to warm, oxygenated
blood and that fragments of aluminum-containing concretions formed emboli. This
hypothesis is supported by the fact that aluminum-containing emboli were
generally not present in the lungs, which are bypassed by ECMO.
Sequential serum aluminum and urine aluminum: creatinine ratio and tissue
aluminum loading in infants with fractures/rickets.
Koo W.W. Krug-Wispe S.K. Succop P. Bendon R. Kaplan L.A.
From: Pediatrics (1992 May) 89(5 Pt 1):877-81
Aluminum toxicity is associated with the development of bone disorders,
including fractures, osteopenia, and osteomalacia. Fifty-one infants with a mean
(± SEM) birth weight of 1007 ±34 g, gestational age of 28.5 +/-0.3 weeks, and
serial radiographic documentation at 3, 6, 9, and 12 months for the presence (n
= 16) or absence (n = 35) of fractures and/or rickets were studied at the same
intervals to determine the serial changes in serum aluminum concentrations and
urine aluminum-creatinine ratios. Autopsy bone samples were used to determine
the presence of tissue aluminum. One infant who received aluminum-containing
antacid had marked increase in serum aluminum to 83 micrograms/L while urine
aluminum-creatinine ratio increased from 0.09 to a peak of 8.53. Vertebrae from
three infants at autopsy (full enteral feeding was tolerated for 37 and 41 days
in two infants, respectively) showed aluminum deposition in the zone of
provisional calcification and along the newly formed trabecula.
Aluminum in parenteral solutions revisited again.
Klein G.L.
From: Am J Clin Nutr (1995 Mar) 61(3):449-56
It has been a dozen years since aluminum was first shown to contaminate
parenteral nutrition solutions and to be a contributing factor in the
pathogenesis of metabolic bone disease in parenteral nutrition patients as well
as in uremic patients. However, there are no regulations in place to effectively
reduce aluminum contamination of various parenterally administered nutrients,
drugs, and biologic products. The purpose of this review is fourfold: 1.) to
summarize our knowledge of the adverse effects of aluminum on bone formation and
mineralization in parenteral nutrition patients; 2.) to discuss the possible
role of aluminum in the osteopenic bone disease of preterm infants; 3.) to show
how lack of regulations covering aluminum content of parenteral solutions can
lead to vulnerability of new groups of patients to aluminum toxicity, the
example being given here is that of burn patients
Aluminum-induced anemia.
From: Am J Kidney Dis (1985 Nov) 6(5):348-52
... many questions still remain unanswered, it is clear that aluminum causes
a microcytic hypoproliferative anemia and is a factor responsible for worsening
anemia in patients with end-stage renal disease.
Arch Dermatol (1984 Oct) 120(10):1318-22
Three patients had subcutaneous nodules at the sites of previous injections
of vaccine containing tetanus toxoid, showed aluminum crystals in the nodules
from two patients. From the evidence available, we believe that these nodules
are a complication of inoculations with aluminum-containing vaccines.
Persistent subcutaneous nodules in patients hyposensitized with
aluminum-containing allergen extracts.
Garcia-Patos V. Pujol R.M. Alomar A. Cistero A. Curell R.
Fernandez-Figueras M.T. de Moragas J.M.
From: Arch Dermatol (1995 Dec) 131(12):1421-4
These lesions have been mainly attributed to a hypersensitivity reaction to
aluminum hydroxide, which is used as an absorbing agent in many vaccines and
hyposensitization preparations. Patch tests with standard antigens and aluminum
compounds and histopathologic and ultrastructural studies were performed on 10
patients with persistent subcutaneous nodules on the upper part of their arms
after injection of aluminum-adsorbed dust and/or pollen extracts. The nodules
appeared 1 month to 6.5 years after injections.
Trace metals and degenerative diseases of the skeleton.
An increase in fibrosarcomas in a biopsy population of cats in the
Pennsylvania area appears to be related to the increased vaccination of cats
following enactment of a mandatory rabies vaccination law.
The majority of fibrosarcomas arose in sites routinely used by veterinarians
for vaccination, and 42 of 198 tumors were surrounded by lymphocytes and
macrophages containing foreign material identical to that previously described
in postvaccinal inflammatory injection site reactions. Some of the vaccines used
have aluminum-based adjuvants, and macrophages surrounding three tumors
contained aluminum oxide identified by electron probe microanalysis and imaged
by energy-filtered electron microscopy. Persistence of inflammatory and
immunological reactions associated with aluminum may predispose the cat to a
derangement of its fibrous connective tissue repair response, leading to
neoplasia.
Aspects of aluminum toxicity.
Hewitt C.D. Savory J. Wills M.R.
From: Clin Lab Med (1990 Jun) 10(2):403-22
Attention was first drawn to the potential role of aluminum as a toxic metal
over 50 years ago, but was dismissed as a toxic agent as recently as 15 years
ago. The accumulation of aluminum, in some patients with chronic renal failure,
is associated with the development of toxic phenomena; dialysis encephalopathy,
osteomalacic dialysis osteodystrophy, and an anemia. Aluminum accumulation also
occurs in patients who are not on dialysis, predominantly infants and children
with immature or impaired renal function. Aluminum has also been implicated as a
toxic agent in the etiology of Alzheimer's disease, Guamiam amyotrophic lateral
sclerosis, and parkinsonism-dementia.
Soft tissue sarcoma associated with aluminum oxide ceramic total hip
arthroplasty. A case report.
Ryu R.K. Bovill E.G. Jr Skinner H.B. Murray W.R.
From: Clin Orthop (1987 Mar)(216):207-12
Malignant tumors around fracture fixation implants have been reported
sporadically for many years. Recently, however, reports of sarcomatous
degeneration around a standard cemented hip arthroplasty and around
cobalt-chromium-bearing hip arthroplasties raise new questions of the malignant
potential of metallic ends prostheses. Sarcomatous changes around aluminum oxide
ceramics seem not to have been reported in the literature. The present report
may be the first documented case of an aggressive soft tissue sarcoma detected
15 months after the patient had an uncemented ceramic total hip arthroplasty. If
a causal relationship exists, the incidence of this phenomenon in the United
States is 250 times greater than would be expected from statistics on soft
tissue sarcoma at the hip.
Aluminum-induced granulomas in a tattoo.
McFadden N. Lyberg T. Hensten-Pettersen A.
From: J Am Acad Dermatol (1989 May) 20(5 Pt 2):903-8
Aluminum was the only nonorganic element present in the test site tissue.
This is the first report of confirmed aluminum-induced, delayed-hypersensitivity
granulomas in a tattoo.
Delayed healing in full-thickness wounds treated with aluminum chloride
solution. A histologic study with evaporimetry correlation.
From: J Am Acad Dermatol (1986 Nov) 15(5 Pt 1):982-9
Wounds were treated either with 30% aluminum chloride solution or ferric
subsulfate solution or were allowed to clot with minimal pressure from a gauze
pad. Delay in reepithelialization was noted histologically both in wounds
treated with aluminum chloride and in those treated with ferric subsulfate
compared to controls. Presumably this delay was the result of tissue necrosis
caused by these hemostatic agents, resulting in slightly larger and less
cosmetically acceptable scars. Plots of evaporimetry data revealed a biphasic
pattern of water loss during healing, with an initial rapid decline in water
loss followed by a much slower decline.
Aluminium and injection site reactions.
Culora G.A. Ramsay A.D. Theaker J.M.
From: J Clin Pathol (1996 Oct) 49(10):844-7
To alert pathologists to the spectrum of histological appearances that may be
seen in injection site reactions related to aluminium, showed unusual features
not described previously. In one, there was a sclerosing lipogranuloma-like
reaction with unlined cystic spaces containing crystalline material. The other
case presented as a large symptomatic subcutaneous swelling which icroscopically
showed diffuse and wide-spread involvement of the subcutis by a lymphoid
infiltrate with prominent lymphoid follicles.
CONCLUSIONS: This report highlights the changes encountered in aluminium
injection site reactions and emphasises that the lesions have a wider range of
histological appearances than described previously.
Aluminum and gallium arrest formation of cerebrospinal fluid by the mechanism
of OH- depletion.
AlCl3 or GaCl3 was added to artificial cerebrospinal
fluid and perfused through the cerebral ventricles of the rat. Depending on the
metal and its concentration (1-10 mM) the pH of the perfusate ranged from 7.2 to
3.5. At 10 mM metal chloride, yielding pH 4.7 (Al) or 3.5 (Ga), formation of
cerebrospinal fluid was suppressed 100%. This mechanism may also account for the
antiperspirant action of Al salts.
Aluminum toxicity and albumin.
Kelly A.T. Short B.L. Rains T.C. May J.C. Progar J.J.
From: ASAIO Trans (1989 Jul-Sep) 35(3):674-6
During a study of priming solutions for extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO)
in the intensive care nursery, it was discovered that those solutions using
certain brands of 25% albumin contained aluminum levels within the toxic range.
When the brand was changed to a brand known to have a lower aluminum (Al)
content, a marked drop in priming solution Al levels was measured.
The role of aluminium for adverse reactions and immunogenicity of
diphtheria-tetanus booster vaccine.
Mark A. Granstrom M.
From: Acta Paediatr (1994 Feb) 83(2):159-63
235 schoolchildren aged 10 years received either a regular, aluminium-adsorbed
diphtheria-tetanus vaccine or the same vaccine in fluid form, in order to
investigate if local side effects could be diminished by exclusion of aluminium.
System reactions were rare and local reactions frequent in both groups but
larger local reactions were even more pronounced in the non-adsorbed vaccine
group.
Potroom palsy? Neurologic disorder in three aluminum smelter workers.
Heyer N.J.
From: Arch Intern Med (1985 Nov) 145(11):1972-5
We studied three patients with a progressive neurologic disorder, all of whom
had worked for over 12 years in the same potroom of an aluminum smelting plant.
All had incoordination and an intention tremor. Two of the three patients had
cognitive deficits, and the most severely affected patient also had spastic
paraparesis. None had involvement of the peripheral nervous system. Despite
extensive evaluations, the cause of these patients' problems remains obscure.
Neurotoxic effects of aluminum in animals are directed at the central nervous
system, and theoretically long-term low-level exposure to aluminum in the
potroom could explain the findings in our patients.
Reducing aluminum: an occupation possibly associated with bladder cancer
Theriault G. De Guire L. Cordier S.
From: Can Med Assoc J (1981) 124(4):419-422,425
These findings suggest that employment in an aluminum reduction plant
accounts for part of the excess of bladder cancer in the region studied. (Author
abstract) (85 Refs)
Immunohistochemical study of microtubule-associated protein 2 and ubiquitin
in chronically aluminum-intoxicated rabbit brain.
Takeda M. Tatebayashi Y. Tanimukai S. Nakamura Y. Tanaka T.
Nishimura T.
From: Acta Neuropathol (Berl) (1991) 82(5):346-52
Experimental neurofibrillary change was produced in rabbit brain by daily
subcutaneous aluminum tartrate injection for 40 days.
Neurotoxic effects of aluminium on embryonic chick brain cultures.
From: Acta Neuropathol (Berl) (1994) 88(4):359-66
Toxic damage of brain cells by aluminium (Al) is discussed as a possible
factor in the development of neurodegenerative disorders in humans. Effects of
Al on cell viability (lysosomal and mitochondrial activity) and differentiation
(synthesis of cell-specific proteins) were found to the brain area specific with
the highest sensitivity observed in optic tectum.
Aluminium in tooth pastes and Alzheimer's disease.
Verbeeck R.M. Driessens F.C. Rotgans J.
From: Acta Stomatol Belg (1990 Jun) 87(2):141-4
The role of aluminium from tooth pastes may be even more important than that
from the drinking water.
Persistent subcutaneous nodules in children hyposensitized with aluminium-containing
allergen extracts.
Frost L. Johansen P. Pedersen S. Veien N. Ostergaard P.A. Nielsen
M.H.
From: Allergy (1985 Jul) 40(5):368-72
A follow-up study of 202 children who had received hyposensitization with
aluminium-containingallergens showed that 1-3 years after cessation of
hyposensitization 13 children still had severely treatment-resistant
subcutaneous nodules in their forearms. Because of their long persistence the
nodules of six children were studied in detail. Histologically, the nodules
showed infiltration with lymphocytes (forming germinal centres), macrophages,
plasma cells, mast cells and a few eosinophils.
In five patients aluminium crystals were found scattered between the cells
and, in addition, the phagosomes of the macrophages contained aluminium. Patch
tests for aluminium were positive in four of the six patients.
Contact sensitivity to aluminium in a patient hyposensitized with aluminium
precipitated grass pollen.
Clemmensen O. Knudsen H.E.
From: Contact Dermatitis (1980 Aug) 6(5):305-8
Standard patch testing of a patient with eczema revealed positive reactions
to the aluminium discs used for testing.
Behavioural effects of gestational exposure to aluminium.
Rankin J. Sedowofia K. Clayton R. Manning A.
From: Ann Ist Super Sanita (1993) 29(1):147-52
The involvement of aluminium in the aetiology of a number of human
pathological diseases has altered its status from being a nontoxic,
nonabsorbable, harmless element. This maybe of particular concern to the
developing foetus which is more susceptible to agents and at lower levels than
the adult. Little attention has been given to aluminium's potential reproductive
toxicity until recently and further research is required for a full evaluation
of its toxicity. Our preliminary results demonstrate behavioural and
neurochemical alterations in the offspring of mice exposed to aluminium during
gestation. Further, the effects of such exposure are also present in the adult
animal suggesting persistent changes in behaviour following prenatal exposure.
The absence of extracellular calcium potentiates the killing of cultured
hepatocytes by aluminum maltolate.
Snyder J.W. Serroni A. Savory J. Farber J.L.
From: Arch Biochem Biophys (1995 Jan 10) 316(1):434-42
This data defines a new model in which aluminum kills liver cells by a
mechanisms distinct from previously recognized pathways of lethal cell injury.
It is hypothesized that aluminum binds to cytoskeletal proteins intimately
associated with the plasma membrane. This interaction eventually disrupts the
permeability barrier function of the cell membrane, an event that heralds the
death of the hepatocyte.
Sensitization to aluminium by aluminium-precipitated dust and pollen
extracts.
Castelain P.Y. Castelain M. Vervloet D. Garbe L. Mallet B.
From: Contact Dermatitis (1988 Jul) 19(1):58-60
... the means of sensitization was the inoculation of aluminium-precipitated
pollen or dust extracts for hyposensitization. We conclude that aluminium
allergy is not exceptional.
Allergy to non-toxoid constituents of vaccines and implications for patch
testing.
Cox N.H. Moss C. Forsyth A.
From: Contact Dermatitis (1988 Mar) 18(3):143-6
Aluminium allergy causes false positive patch test reactions and we propose
methods of patch testing patients with symptoms at vaccination sites in order to
avoid this problem.
Aluminium allergy in patients hyposensitized with aluminium-precipitated
antigen extracts.
Lopez S. Pelaez A. Navarro L.A. Montesinos E. Morales C. Carda C.
Aluminum precipitated antigen solutions, a small percentage of patients
develop persistent subcutaneous nodules at the injection site; the existence of
delayed sensitivity to aluminium has been implicated in the pathogenesis of
these nodules.
Aluminium allergy.
Veien N.K. Hattel T. Justesen O. Norholm A.
From: Contact Dermatitis (1986 Nov) 15(5):295-7
13 children ranging in age from 1 to 13 years and 1 adult patient had
positive patch tests to 2% AlCl3 in water. 13 of them had pruritic
excoriated papules, 9 at sites of hyposensitization therapy with aluminium-bound
pollen extracts, and 4 at sites of childhood immunization with an aluminium-bound
vaccine (Di-Te-Pol).
Vaccination granulomas and aluminium allergy: course and prognostic factors.
Kaaber K. Nielsen A.O. Veien N.K.
From: Contact Dermatitis (1992 May) 26(5):304-6
21 children who had cutaneous granulomas following immunization with a
vaccine containing aluminium hydroxide, and who had positive patch tests to
aqueous aluminium chloride and/or to a Finn Chamber, were followed for 1 to 8
years. During the period of observation, the symptoms cleared in 5 children,
improved in 11, and remained unchanged in 5.
Short-term experimental acidification of a Welsh stream: toxicity of
different forms of aluminium at low pH to fish and invertebrates.
McCahon C.P. Pascoe D.
From: Arch Environ Contam Toxicol (1989 Jan-Apr) 18(1-2):233-42
Minimal effects were observed in the control and acid zones whilst large
mortalities and reduced feeding were recorded in the acid and aluminium zone.
H Differentiated neuroblastoma cells are more susceptible to aluminium
toxicity than developing cells.
E. Meiri
From: Arch Toxicol (1989) 63(3):231-7
Two specific questions were addressed: 1.) Can differentiated cells maintain
their normal excitable function when exposed to aluminium? 2.) Can proper
development of electrophysiological properties be achieved in its presence? We
report that aluminium caused premature onset of deterioration in fully
differentiated cells. Within 4-6 days they depolarized from -29.3 ±0.9 mV to
levels lower than -15 mV; compound polyphasic action potentials were gradually
replaced by slow monophasic spikes before the final loss of excitable properties
and structural deformations was noticed.
Reversal of an aluminum-induced behavioral deficit by administration of
deferoxamine.
Connor D.J. Harrell L.E. Jope R.S.
From: Behav Neurosci (1989 Aug) 103(4):779-83
The behavioral deficit was not due to nonspecific effects caused by lower
fluid consumption. Partial reversal of the deficit was produced by discontinuing
aluminum treatment, 2 weeks prior to testing.
Aluminum-induced neurofibrillary degeneration disrupts acquisition of the
rabbit's classically conditioned nictitating membrane response.
Aluminum intoxicated rabbits, in contrast, did not acquire the conditioned
response over the 4 days of testing. This disruption of conditioning in
aluminum-treated rabbits could not be attributed to deficits in sensory or motor
processes or to illness. Neuropathological analysis revealed widespread
neurofibrillary tangle formation in aluminum-treated animals.
Aluminum, a neurotoxin which affects diverse metabolic reactions.
Joshi J.G.
From: Biofactors (1990 Jul) 2(3):163-9
Experimental evidence is summarized to support the hypothesis that chronic
exposure to low levels of aluminum may lead to neurological disorders.
Distribution of aluminum in different brain regions and body organs of rat.
Vasishta R.K. Gill K.D.
From: Biol Trace Elem Res (1996 May) 52(2):181-92
In the present study, an attempt has been made to investigate the
distribution of aluminum in different regions of brain and body organs of male
albino rats, following subacute and acute aluminum exposure. Aluminum was
observed to accumulate in all regions of the brain with maximum accumulation in
the hippocampus. Aluminum was also seen to compartmentalize in almost all the
tissues of the body to varying extents, and the highest accumulation was in the
spleen.
Ti-6Al-4V ion solution inhibition of osteogenic cell phenotype as a function
of differentiation timecourse in vitro.
Thompson G.J. Puleo D.A.
From: Biomaterials (1996 Oct) 17(20):1949-54
These results indicate that ions associated with Ti-6Al-4V alloy inhibited
the normal differentiation of bone marrow stromal cells to mature osteoblasts in
vitro, suggesting that ions released from implants in vivo may contribute to
implant failure by impairing normal bone deposition.
Aluminium release from glass ionomer cements during early water exposure in
vitro.
Andersson O.H. Dahl J.E.
From: Biomaterials (1994 Sep) 15(11):882-8
Aluminium is a major constituent of glass ionomer cements. During mixing and
setting aluminium is released from the glass into the polyalkeonic acid
solution. Part of this aluminium may not combine with the polyalkeonic acid, but
may be released from the cement. The aluminium release from auto-cured and
light-cured glass ionomer cements during early water exposure was studied. The
former cements released more aluminium than the latter. It is suggested that the
considerable release of aluminium from glass ionomer cements during early water
exposure may explain the reported lack of mineralization of predentin in the
pulp beneath glass ionomer cements. This would correspond to the inhibiting
effect of aluminium on bone mineralization.
Impaired control of information transfer at an isolated synapse treated by
aluminum: is it related to dementia?
Banin E. Meiri H.
From: Brain Res (1987 Oct 13) 423(1-2):359-63
These results indicate that aluminum at concentrations similar to those found
in the diseased brain of demented patients modulates synaptic transmission.
Chronic aluminum-induced motor neuron degeneration: clinical,
neuropathological and molecular biological aspects.
Strong M.J. Garruto R.M.
From: Can J Neurol Sci (1991 Aug) 18(3 Suppl):428-31
Aluminum chloride induces aggregates of phosphorylated neurofilament that
mimics the intraneuronal inclusions of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
Some commonly unrecognized manifestations of metabolic arthropathies.
Cobby M.J. Martel W.
From: Clin Imaging (1992 Jan-Mar) 16(1):1-14
The metabolic arthropathies are characterized by the deposition of abnormal
substances in or around joints. Certain features of some of these arthropathies
and their significance have only recently been recognized and others have been
insufficiently emphasized. An important group of conditions are the
arthropathies related to renal failure and its treatment, namely, aluminum
toxicity, periarticular calcification and crystal deposition,
hyperparathyroidism, and dialysis-related amyloidosis. Crystal deposition
diseases, specifically, gouty arthritis, calcium pyrophosphate deposition, and
calcium hydroxyapatite deposition, are also reviewed.
Sepsis: a cause of aluminum release from tissue stores associated with acute
neurological dysfunction and mortality.
Davenport A. Williams P.S. Roberts N.B. Bone J.M.
From: Clin Nephrol (1988 Jul) 30(1):48-51
We report six cases of patients with renal failure and exposure to aluminum
who developed septicemia. In all cases the serum aluminum increased markedly.
This may have contributed to the neurological dysfunction seen in five, and the
deaths of four of the patients. We suggest that the rise in serum aluminum was
due to the release of tissue-bound aluminum, resulting in an increase in free,
diffusable aluminum and that this jeopardized both neurological function and
immunocompetence.
Daily intakes of aluminium were estimated for 14 age-sex groups based on the
Food and Drug Administration's (FDA) Total Diet Study dietary exposure model.
Estimates of aluminium intakes ranged from 0.7 mg/day for 6-11-month-old infants
to 11.5 mg/day for 14-16-year-old males. Average intakes for adult men and women
were 8-9 and 7 mg/day, respectively. The major contributors to daily intake of
aluminium were foods with aluminium-containing food additives, e.g. grain
products and processed cheese.
Transverse fractures of the spinous process of the 7th cervical vertebra in
RDT patients: an Al related disease?
From: Int J Artif Organs (1987 Mar) 10(2):93-6
The bone fractures had occurred suddenly while the patients were going about
their daily work. These observations indicate that Al- or iron- related bone
disease with secondary hyperparathyroidism can induce bone fracture by only
slight stress in patients maintained on hemodialysis.
Risk of aluminum accumulation in patients with burns and ways to reduce it.
Klein G.L. Herndon D.N. Rutan T.C. Barnett J.R. Miller N.L. Alfrey
A.C.
From: J Burn Care Rehabil (1994 Jul-Aug) 15(4):354-8
Severely burned patients experience a bone lesion consisting of markedly
reduced bone formation and evidence of decreased resportion. The cause of the
lesion may be multifactorial, but aluminum loading, which also occurs in
patients with burns, has been documented to produce this type of injury in both
humans and animals.
Cutaneous exposure to aluminum is greatest from baths, which may provide up
to 8 mg aluminum. However, the dynamics of aluminum entry into the blood via a
damaged skin barrier are unclear. Enteral exposure to aluminum is no greater
than daily dietary exposure. Parenteral sources of aluminum, especially 25%
human serum albumin and calcium gluconate, provide the most significant risk of
loading because of direct introduction of aluminum into the circulation.
Substitution with a different brand of albumin and calcium chloride can
reduce the parenteral aluminum load by as much as 95% and minimize any role
aluminum may play in the pathogenesis of this bone lesion.
Aluminum concentrations in tissues of rats: effect of soft drink packaging.
Kandiah J. Kies C.
From: Biometals (1994 Jan) 7(1):57-60
Canned soft drink fed rats had significantly higher blood, liver and bone
aluminum concentration than rats that were given glass bottled soft drink.
Sources of Aluminum
Over the Counter;
Deoderants, vaginal douches, baby wipes, skin
creams, suntan lotions, toothpaste, buffered asprin, some haemorrhoid and
diarrhea products.
Medical;
Vaccinations, allergy testing, intervenous solutions,
allergens, wound and antacid irrigation, ulcer treatment, blood oxygenization,
bone or joint replacement and burn treatment.
CT Aluminum in acidic surface waters: chemistry, transport, and effects.
From: Environ Health Perspect (1985 Nov) 63:93-104
Ecologically significant concentrations of Al have been reported in surface
waters draining "acid-sensitive" watersheds that are receiving elevated inputs
of acidic deposition. It has been hypothesized that mineral acids from
atmospheric deposition have remobilized Al previously precipitated within the
soil during soil development. This Al is then thought to be transported to
adjacent surface waters. Dissolved mononuclear Al occurs as aquo Al, as well as
OH-, F-, SO4(2-), and organic complexes.
Although past investigations have often ignored non-hydroxide complexes of
Al, it appears that organic and F complexes are the predominant forms of Al in
dilute (low ionic strength) acidic surface waters. The concentration of
inorganic forms of Al increases exponentially with decreases in solution pH.
This response is similar to the theoretical pH dependent solubility of Al
mineral phases.
The concentration of organic forms of Al, however, is strongly correlated
with variations in organic carbon concentration of surface waters rather than
pH. Elevated concentrations of Al in dilute acidic waters are of interest
because: Al is an important pH buffer; Al may influence the cycling of important
elements like P, organic carbon, and trace metals; and Al is potentially toxic
to aquatic organisms.
Inhibition of Ca2+ uptake in freshwater carp, Cyprinus carpio,
during short-term exposure to aluminum.
In carp exposed to pH 5.2 in fresh water, the Ca2+ influx from the water is
reduced by 31% when compared to fish in water of neutral pH. At pH 5.2, the Ca2+
influx but not Na+ uptake is decreased by aluminum (Al). Al reduces Ca2+ influx
dose-dependently: a maximum 55% reduction was observed after 1-2 h exposure to
200 micrograms .1(-1) (7.4 microM) Al.
A mechanism for acute aluminium toxicity in fish
Exley C. Chappell J.S. Birchall J.D.
From: J Theor Biol (1991 Aug 7) 151(3):417-28
Aluminium is acutely toxic to fish in acid waters. The gill is the principal
target organ and death is due to a combination of ionoregulatory, osmoregulatory
and respiratory dysfunction. The mechanism of epithelial cell death is proposed
as a general mechanism of aluminium-induced accelerated cell death.
Can the mechanisms of aluminum neurotoxicity be integrated into a unified
scheme?
From: J Toxicol Environ Health (1996 Aug 30) 48(6):599-613
Regardless of the host, the route of administration, or the speciation,
aluminum is a potent neurotoxicant. In the young adult or developmentally mature
host, the neuronal response to Al exposure can be dichotomized on morphological
grounds. In one, intraneuronal neurofilamentous aggregates are formed, whereas
in the other, significant neurochemical and neurophysiological perturbations are
induced without neurofilamentous aggregate formation.
Evidence is presented that the induction of neurofilamentous aggregates is a
consequence of alterations in the posttranslational processing of neurofilament
(NF), particularly with regard to phosphorylation state. Although Al has been
reported to impact on gene expression, this does not appear to be critical to
the induction of cytoskeletal pathology.
In hosts responding to Al exposure without the induction of cytoskeletal
pathology, impairments in glucose utilization, agonist-stimulated inositol
phosphate accumulation, free radical-mediated cytotoxicity, lipid peroxidation,
reduced cholinergic function, and altered protein phosphorylation have been
described. The extent to which these neurochemical modifications correlate with
the induction of a characteristic neurobehavioral state is unknown.
In addition to these paradigms, Al is toxic in the immediate postnatal
interval. Whether unique mechanisms of toxicity are involved during development
remains to be determined. In this article, the mechanisms of Al neurotoxicity
are reviewed and recommendations are put forth with regard to future research.
Institutional address:
Department of Clinical Neurological Sciences
University of Western Ontario
London, Canada.
mstrong@julian.uwo.ca
Aluminum toxicity following intravesical alum irrigation for hemorrhagic
cystitis.
Mental status changes in an immunosuppressed child can be due to a variety of
causes; aluminum toxicity is rarely considered. We report a teenage girl with
acute lymphoblastic leukemia who developed mental status changes, speech
disturbance, coarse tremor, and abnormal EEG findings following intravesical 1%
alum irrigation and administration of aluminum-containing antacids. All
abnormalities resolved after a nine-week course of intravenous deferoxamine.
Progressing encephalomyelopathy with muscular atrophy, induced by aluminum
powder.
Bugiani O. Ghetti B.
From: Neurobiol Aging (1982 Fall) 3(3):209-22
The injection of aluminum powder into the cerebrospinal fluid of adult
rabbits induced a slowly progressing encephalomyelopathy characterized at first
by alteration of posture and then by myoclonic jerks and muscle weakness.
Neurofibrillary degeneration was the hallmark of the disease and involved
most of the gray areas. Neurogenic muscular atrophy appeared in animals
sacrificed in the second and third month after injection.
Aluminium foil as a wound dressing
Poole M.D. Kalus A.M. von Domarus H.
From: Br J Plast Surg (1979 Apr) 32(2):145-6
ISBN: 0007-1226
Aluminium foil has been found to be an extremely useful and painless way of
dressing wounds prior to delayed skin grafting. However, it is not recommended
for use on skin-graft donor sites as it delays epithelial healing.
From: History of crime against the Food Laws (1929)
by Dr. Riley, the prime mover behind the original Pure Food Law and Director
of the FDA. He resigned in disgust in 1912 over exceptions granted to the law
and lack of enforcement.
Aluminum has been exempted from testing for safety by the FDA under a
convoluted logic wherein it is classified as GRAS. (Generally Regarded As Safe.)
It has never been tested by the FDA on its safety and there are NO restrictions
whatever on the amount or use of aluminum.
Aluminum is known to inhibit cell division during the "S Phase" at levels
less than 4 ppm.
Aluminum toxicity is a widespread problem in all forms of life, including
humans, animals, fish, plants and trees, and causes widespread degradation of
the environment and health. Over 7,000 reference articles
on aluminum toxicity existed in various data bases as of 1936,
(Today, there are more than a million.) all recognizing the toxicity.
ALL INFORMATION, DATA, AND
MATERIAL CONTAINED, PRESENTED, OR PROVIDED HERE IS FOR GENERAL INFORMATION
PURPOSES ONLY AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED AS REFLECTING THE KNOWLEDGE OR OPINIONS
OF THE PUBLISHER, AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED OR INTENDED AS PROVIDING MEDICAL OR
LEGAL ADVICE. THE DECISION WHETHER OR NOT TO VACCINATE IS AN IMPORTANT AND
COMPLEX ISSUE AND SHOULD BE MADE BY YOU, AND YOU ALONE, IN CONSULTATION WITH
YOUR HEALTH CARE PROVIDER.
"A foolish faith in authority is the worst enemy of truth."
-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
"I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education."
-- Thomas Jefferson, letter to William C. Jarvis, September 28, 1820
Sandy's Scandals Column
Past and current Scandals
- columns by Sandy Gottstein (aka Mintz)*
* ►February 8, 2010 - Inovio
Biomedical Cervical Cancer Therapeutic Vaccine Generates Dose-Related
Immune Response in Clinical Trial - Inovio via BusinessWire
via Technology Marketing Corporation - "VGX-3100 is a DNA vaccine
targeting the E6 and E7 proteins of human papillomavirus (HPV) types 16
and 18 and is delivered via in vivo electroporation. Similar to
previously reported data from the initial lowest dose cohort of this
phase I trial, the vaccine was found to be generally safe and well
tolerated. While previously reported data showed significant cellular
and humoral immune responses, data from this second, intermediate dose
group highlighted a significantly increased and dose-related immune
response specific to the antigens targeted by the vaccine."..."While
recent HPV preventive vaccines have been successful in protecting
against infections that may lead to cervical cancer, Inovio's
therapeutic vaccine targets the millions of women already infected with
HPV and is intended to treat pre-cancerous cells and cervical cancer
caused by this virus. Current vaccines do not serve this group of
women," Dr. Kim added."
* ►February 6, 2010 - Autism
Findings Retracted
- The New American - "Actress Holly Robinson Peete remembers, 'When my
son was two-and-a-half, he was just recovering from an ear infection
and had been on antibiotics, therefore his immune system was
suppressed. He had already missed several appointments for his
vaccination so his pediatrician wanted to catch him up on all of them
in the same day. Althrough I asked if he’d consider waiting or breaking
up the cocktail, which contains three viruses, he laughed me out of the
office and belittled me. I firmly believe that it took my son to a
place of no return and his body could not handle it. He had a violent
reaction with convulsions and then he stopped talking and slipped into
a silence. He no longer said, 'Hi, Mommy,' he no longer responded to
his name and he no longer made eye contact.”