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Retinol May Counteract the Negative Effect of Cadmium on Bone

Author

  • Annette Engstrom
  • Helen Hakansson
  • Staffan Skerfving
  • Per Biellerup
  • Jonas Lidfeldt
  • Thomas Lundh
  • Göran Samsioe
  • Marie Vahter
  • Agneta Akesson

Summary, in English

Cadmium and high vitamin A intake are both proposed risk factors for low bone mineral density (BMD), but potential interactions have not been studied. Within the Women's Health in the Lund Area, a population-based study in southern Sweden, we measured retinol in serum among 606 women aged 54-64 y. Data on BMD were measured by DXA at the distal forearm. Parathyroid hormone (PTH), bone alkaline phosphatase (bALP), and osteocalcin in serum and deoxypyridinoline (DPD) and cadmium in urine were available. Associations were evaluated using multivariable-adjusted linear regression analysis. Serum retinol concentrations (median, 1.9; range, 0.97-4.3 mu mol/L) were inversely associated with the bone formation markers bALP and osteocalcin (P <= 0.04) and with PTH (P = 0.07) and tended to be positively associated with BMD (P = 0.08) but not with the bone resorption marker DPD, indicating different effects on bone compared to urinary cadmium (median, 0.66; range, 0.12-3.6 nmol/mmol creatinine). Women with serum retinol less than the median and cadmium greater than the median had lower BMD than those with retinol greater than the median and cadmium less than the median (P = 0.016 among all women and P = 0.010 among never-smokers). Our findings suggest that adequate vitamin A status may counteract the adverse association between cadmium and BMD. J. Nutr. 141: 2198-2203, 2011.

Publishing year

2011

Language

English

Pages

2198-2203

Publication/Series

Journal of Nutrition

Volume

141

Issue

12

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Topic

  • Nutrition and Dietetics

Status

Published

Research group

  • Family Medicine and Community Medicine

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1541-6100