Aluminum (Al) is the third most abundant element in the earth's crust and is omnipresent in our environment, including our food. However, with normal renal function, oral and enteral ingestion of substances contaminated with Al, such as antacids and infant formulae, do not cause problems. The intestine, skin, and respiratory tract are barriers to Al entry into the blood. However, contamination of fluids given parenterally, such as parenteral nutrition solutions, or hemodialysis, peritoneal dialysis or even oral Al-containing substances to patients with impaired renal function could result in accumulation in bone, parathyroids, liver, spleen, and kidney. The toxic effects of Al to the skeleton include fractures accompanying a painful osteoma...
Background. A recent retrospective study has clearly demonstrated a reduction of cases with positive...
Dialysate aluminium concentration and renal bone disease. We studied 40 patients maintained on regul...
This MiniReview updates and expands the MiniReview of aluminium toxicokinetics by Wilhelm et al. pub...
Aluminum toxicity in patients with chronic renal failure has been related to renal osteodystrophy an...
Aluminum intoxication is an iatrogenic disease caused by the use of aluminum compounds for phosphate...
Aluminium (Al) is frequently accessible to animal and human populations to the extent that intoxicat...
Although aluminum is the most abundant metal in nature, it has no known biological function. However...
Aluminum has no known biological function; however, it is a contaminant present in most foods and me...
Orally-ingested aluminum compounds have been implicated in the development of dialysis encephalopath...
DOI 10.1186/s12995-015-0055-8hemodialysis, aluminum accumulates in the bone withTochigi 329-0498, Ja...
Abstract Background Aluminium (Al) toxicity was frequent in the 1980s in patients ingesting Al conta...
Aluminum (Al), an element with no known biological function, has been shown both clinically and expe...
Aluminum is environmentally ubiquitous, providing human exposure. Usual human exposure is primarily ...
<div><p>ABSTRACT About four decades ago, the relationship between dialysis-dementia and aluminum (Al...
The effects of discontinuation of aluminum exposure on aluminum–induced osteomalacia. Studies in pat...
Background. A recent retrospective study has clearly demonstrated a reduction of cases with positive...
Dialysate aluminium concentration and renal bone disease. We studied 40 patients maintained on regul...
This MiniReview updates and expands the MiniReview of aluminium toxicokinetics by Wilhelm et al. pub...
Aluminum toxicity in patients with chronic renal failure has been related to renal osteodystrophy an...
Aluminum intoxication is an iatrogenic disease caused by the use of aluminum compounds for phosphate...
Aluminium (Al) is frequently accessible to animal and human populations to the extent that intoxicat...
Although aluminum is the most abundant metal in nature, it has no known biological function. However...
Aluminum has no known biological function; however, it is a contaminant present in most foods and me...
Orally-ingested aluminum compounds have been implicated in the development of dialysis encephalopath...
DOI 10.1186/s12995-015-0055-8hemodialysis, aluminum accumulates in the bone withTochigi 329-0498, Ja...
Abstract Background Aluminium (Al) toxicity was frequent in the 1980s in patients ingesting Al conta...
Aluminum (Al), an element with no known biological function, has been shown both clinically and expe...
Aluminum is environmentally ubiquitous, providing human exposure. Usual human exposure is primarily ...
<div><p>ABSTRACT About four decades ago, the relationship between dialysis-dementia and aluminum (Al...
The effects of discontinuation of aluminum exposure on aluminum–induced osteomalacia. Studies in pat...
Background. A recent retrospective study has clearly demonstrated a reduction of cases with positive...
Dialysate aluminium concentration and renal bone disease. We studied 40 patients maintained on regul...
This MiniReview updates and expands the MiniReview of aluminium toxicokinetics by Wilhelm et al. pub...