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・ Cadmium
・ Cadmium (Sky album)
・ Cadmium acetate
・ Cadmium arsenide
・ Cadmium bromide
・ Cadmium chloride
・ Cadmium chromate
・ Cadmium cyanide
・ Cadmium fluoride
・ Cadmium hydride
・ Cadmium hydroxide
・ Cadmium iodide
・ Cadmium nitrate
・ Cadmium oxide
・ Cadmium pigments
Cadmium poisoning
・ Cadmium selenide
・ Cadmium stearate
・ Cadmium sulfate
・ Cadmium sulfide
・ Cadmium telluride
・ Cadmium telluride photovoltaics
・ Cadmium tetrafluoroborate
・ Cadmium tungstate
・ Cadmium zinc telluride
・ Cadmium(I) tetrachloroaluminate
・ Cadmium-transporting ATPase
・ Cadmogenes
・ Cadmoindite
・ Cadmon


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Cadmium poisoning : ウィキペディア英語版
Cadmium poisoning

Cadmium is an extremely toxic metal commonly found in industrial workplaces. Due to its low permissible exposure limit, overexposures may occur even in situations where trace quantities of cadmium are found. Cadmium is used extensively in electroplating, although the nature of the operation does not generally lead to overexposures. Cadmium is also found in some industrial paints and may represent a hazard when sprayed. Operations involving removal of cadmium paints by scraping or blasting may pose a significant hazard. Cadmium is also present in the manufacturing of some types of batteries. Exposures to cadmium are addressed in specific standards for the general industry, shipyard employment, construction industry, and the agricultural industry.
==Sources of exposure==

In the 1950s and 1960s industrial exposure to cadmium was high, but as the toxic effects of cadmium became apparent, industrial limits on cadmium exposure have been reduced in most industrialized nations and many policy makers agree on the need to reduce exposure further. While working with cadmium it is important to do so under a fume hood to protect against dangerous fumes. Brazing fillers which contain cadmium should be handled with care. Serious toxicity problems have resulted from long-term exposure to cadmium plating baths.
Buildup of cadmium levels in the water, air, and soil has been occurring particularly in industrial areas. Environmental exposure to cadmium has been particularly problematic in Japan where many people have consumed rice that was grown in cadmium contaminated irrigation water. This phenomenon is known under the name itai-itai disease.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.kanazawa-med.ac.jp/~pubhealt/cadmium2/itaiitai-e/itai01.html )
Food is another source of cadmium. Plants may only contain small or moderate amounts in non-industrial areas, but high levels may be found in the liver and kidneys of adult animals. The daily intake of cadmium through food varies by geographic region. Intake is reported to be approximately 8 to 30mcg in Europe and the United States versus 59 to 113 mcg in various areas of Japan.〔Elinder CG. Uses, occurrence and intake. In:Cadmium and Health: An Epidemiologic and Toxicological Appraisal, Friberg L, Elinder CG, Nordberg GF et al, CRC press, Boca Raton, FL 1985. Vol 1, p.23〕
Cigarettes are also a significant source of cadmium exposure. Although there is generally less cadmium in tobacco than in food, the lungs absorb cadmium more efficiently than the stomach.
Aside from tobacco smokers, people who live near hazardous waste sites or factories that release cadmium into the air have the potential for exposure to cadmium in air. However, numerous state and federal regulations in the United States control the amount of cadmium that can be released to the air from waste sites and incinerators so that properly regulated sites are not hazardous. The general population and people living near hazardous waste sites may be exposed to cadmium in contaminated food, dust, or water from unregulated releases or accidental releases. Numerous regulations and use of pollution controls are enforced to prevent such releases.
Workers can be exposed to cadmium in air from the smelting and refining of metals, or from the air in plants that make cadmium products such as batteries, coatings, or plastics. Workers can also be exposed when soldering or welding metal that contains cadmium. Approximately 512,000 workers in the United States are in environments each year where a cadmium exposure may occur. Regulations that set permissible levels of exposure, however, are enforced to protect workers and to make sure that levels of cadmium in the air are considerably below levels thought to result in harmful effects.
Artists who work with cadmium pigments, which are commonly used in strong oranges, reds, and yellows, can easily accidentally ingest dangerous amounts, particularly if they use the pigments in dry form, as with chalk pastels, or in mixing their own paints.
Some sources of phosphate in fertilizers contain cadmium in amounts of up to 100 mg/kg, which can lead to an increase in the concentration of cadmium in soil (for example in New Zealand). Nickel-cadmium batteries are one of the most popular and most common cadmium-based products, and this soil can be mined for use in them.
An experiment during the early 1960s involving the spraying of cadmium over Norwich has recently been declassified by the UK government, as documented in a BBC News article.
In February 2010, cadmium was found in an entire line of Wal-Mart exclusive Miley Cyrus jewelry. The charms were tested at the behest of the ''Associated Press'' and were found to contain high levels of cadmium. Wal-Mart did not stop selling the jewelry until May 12 because "it would be too difficult to test products already on its shelves". On June 4 cadmium was detected in the paint used on promotional drinking glasses for the movie ''Shrek Forever After'', sold by McDonald's Restaurants, triggering a recall of 12 million glasses.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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