Inorganic arsenic (In-As), an occupational and environmental human carcinogen, undergoes biomethylation to monomethylarsonate (MMA) and dimethylarsinate (DMA). It has been proposed that saturation of methylation capacity at high exposure levels may lead to a threshold for the carcinogenicity of In-As. The relative distribution of urinary In-As, MMA, and DMA is used as a measure of human methylation capacity. The most common pathway for elevated environmental exposure to In-As worldwide is through drinking water. We conducted a biomarker study in northern Chile of a population chronically exposed to water naturally contaminated with high arsenic content (600 micrograms/l). In this paper we present the results of a prospective follow-up of 73...
AbstractArsenic is a proven human carcinogen. Although the mechanism of its carcinogenicity is still...
Several recent investigations have reported associations between a reduced capacity to fully methyla...
Arsenic is a proven human carcinogen. Although the mechanism of its carcinogenicity is still largely...
Inorganic arsenic (In-As), an occupational and environmental human carcinogen, undergoes biomethylat...
Methylation is considered the detoxification pathway for inorganic arsenic (InAs), an established hu...
We investigated the evidence of a familial contribution to urinary methylation patterns in families ...
More than 0.3 million individuals are subject to chronic exposure to arsenic via their drinking wate...
Chronic environmental exposure to inorganic arsenic is widely associated with human disease. Low hum...
Subjects exposed to arsenic show significant inter- individual variation ill urinary patterns of ars...
Humans as well as most mammals metabolize inorganic arsenic (Inorg As), a recognized human carcinoge...
[[abstract]]Subjects exposed to arsenic show significant inter-individual variation in urinary patte...
p>Inorganic arsenic (iAs), a naturally occurring drinking water contaminant, is a potent human carc...
In humans, ingested inorganic arsenic is metabolized to monomethylarsenic (MMA) then to dimethylarse...
Arsenic can cause cancerous and non-cancerous human diseases . Inorganic arsenic from drinking water...
[[abstract]]Arsenic can cause cancerous and non-cancerous human diseases. Inorganic arsenic from dri...
AbstractArsenic is a proven human carcinogen. Although the mechanism of its carcinogenicity is still...
Several recent investigations have reported associations between a reduced capacity to fully methyla...
Arsenic is a proven human carcinogen. Although the mechanism of its carcinogenicity is still largely...
Inorganic arsenic (In-As), an occupational and environmental human carcinogen, undergoes biomethylat...
Methylation is considered the detoxification pathway for inorganic arsenic (InAs), an established hu...
We investigated the evidence of a familial contribution to urinary methylation patterns in families ...
More than 0.3 million individuals are subject to chronic exposure to arsenic via their drinking wate...
Chronic environmental exposure to inorganic arsenic is widely associated with human disease. Low hum...
Subjects exposed to arsenic show significant inter- individual variation ill urinary patterns of ars...
Humans as well as most mammals metabolize inorganic arsenic (Inorg As), a recognized human carcinoge...
[[abstract]]Subjects exposed to arsenic show significant inter-individual variation in urinary patte...
p>Inorganic arsenic (iAs), a naturally occurring drinking water contaminant, is a potent human carc...
In humans, ingested inorganic arsenic is metabolized to monomethylarsenic (MMA) then to dimethylarse...
Arsenic can cause cancerous and non-cancerous human diseases . Inorganic arsenic from drinking water...
[[abstract]]Arsenic can cause cancerous and non-cancerous human diseases. Inorganic arsenic from dri...
AbstractArsenic is a proven human carcinogen. Although the mechanism of its carcinogenicity is still...
Several recent investigations have reported associations between a reduced capacity to fully methyla...
Arsenic is a proven human carcinogen. Although the mechanism of its carcinogenicity is still largely...