FEAT DAILY NEWSLETTER
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March 27, 2001 Search
www.feat.org/search/news.asp
http://unisci.com/stories/20011/0327013.htm
A University of Calgary Faculty of Medicine research team
has found that exposure to mercury causes degeneration of brain neurons in
animals. The scientific findings are
being published in a cover story in the April edition of the British journal
NeuroReport. The researchers’ academic paper is supported by a time-lapse video
recorded from a microscope camera showing how neurons degenerate when they are
exposed to mercury.
“Our study illustrates how mercury ions alter the cell
membrane structure of developing neurons,” says Fritz Lorscheider, professor of
physiology and biophysics, University of Calgary. “This discovery provides visual
evidence of our previous findings that mercury produces a molecular lesion in
the brain.”
The research paper, co-authored by U of C professors Fritz
Lorscheider and Naweed Syed as well as medical student Christopher Leong, looks
at brain neurons from snails. The researchers added mercury ions to cell
cultures of developing neurons and observed the neurons undergoing rapid
degeneration.
Nerve processes in snails and other animals, specifically
the microtubules in neurons, are similar to those of humans.
The team has identified how this degeneration takes
place:
·
Mercury ions attach to a neuron, causing its
microtubules to disassemble or break down and, ultimately, leave that neuron
stripped of its protective membrane;
·
Some of these stripped neurons then form aggregates;
·
These aggregates are damaged neurons that are clumped
or tangled together;
·
The damaged neurons cease to function as healthy
neurons would.
Other metals - aluminum, lead, cadmium and manganese -?
did not produce this type of degeneration.
“Mercury has long been known to be a potent neurotoxic
substance, whether it is inhaled as vapor or consumed in the diet as a food contaminant,”
says Lorscheider. “This research provides visual confirmation of that.”
Medical research laboratories, over the past 15 years,
have established that dental amalgam tooth fillings are a major contributor to mercury
body burden.
In 1997, research done by Lorscheider and colleagues at
the universities of Calgary and Kentucky demonstrated that mercury vapor inhalation
in rats produced a molecular lesion in the brain—similar to a lesion seen in
80% of human Alzheimer-diseased brains.
This work has been funded by the Alberta Heritage Foundation
for
Medical Research, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research
and the
International Academy of Oral Medicine & Toxicology. -
By Karen Thomas
* * *
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