Trace Element Abundance and Renal Disease


Autoria(s): Floyd, Chloe; McKinley, Jennifer; Ofterdinger, Ulrich; Fogarty, Damian; Atkinson, Peter
Contribuinte(s)

Jeannee, Nicolas

Romary, Thomas

Data(s)

09/07/2014

Resumo

This research investigates the relationship between elevated trace elements in soils, stream sediments and stream water and the prevalence of Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD). The study uses a collaboration of datasets provided from the UK Renal Registry Report (UKRR) on patients with renal diseases requiring treatment including Renal Replacement Therapy (RRT), the soil geochemical dataset for Northern Ireland provided by the Tellus Survey, Geological Survey of Northern Ireland (GSNI) and the bioaccessibility of Potentially Toxic Elements (PTEs) from soil samples which were obtained from the Unified Barge Method (UBM). The relationship between these factors derives from the UKRR report which highlights incidence rates of renal impaired patients showing regional variation with cases of unknown aetiology. Studies suggest a potential cause of the large variation and uncertain aetiology is associated with underlying environmental factors such as the oral bioaccessibility of trace elements in the gastrointestinal tract. <br/>As previous research indicates that long term exposure is related to environmental factors, Northern Ireland is ideally placed for this research as people traditionally live in the same location for long periods of time. Exploratory data analysis and multivariate analyses are used to examine the soil, stream sediments and stream water geochemistry data for a range of key elements including arsenic, lead, cadmium and mercury identified from a review of previous renal disease literature. The spatial prevalence of patients with long term CKD is analysed on an area basis. Further work includes cluster analysis to detect areas of low or high incidences of CKD that are significantly correlated in space, Geographical Weighted Regression (GWR) and Poisson kriging to examine locally varying relationship between elevated concentrations of PTEs and the prevalence of CKD. <br/>

Identificador

http://pure.qub.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/trace-element-abundance-and-renal-disease(38d4257f-c6ec-44ce-b0e9-67182c22f92d).html

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Presses de MINES

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess

Fonte

Floyd , C , McKinley , J , Ofterdinger , U , Fogarty , D & Atkinson , P 2014 , Trace Element Abundance and Renal Disease . in N Jeannee & T Romary (eds) , Geostatistics For Environmental Applications: geoEnv 2014 . Collection Sciences de la terre et de l'environment , Presses de MINES , Paris, France , pp. 58 , GeoEnv 2014 , Paris , France , 7-11 July .

Tipo

contributionToPeriodical