Chromium toxicity refers to any poisonous toxic effect in an organism or cell that results from exposure to specific forms of chromium—especially hexavalent chromium. Hexavalent chromium and its compounds are toxic when inhaled or ingested. Trivalent chromium is a trace mineral that is essential to human nutrition. There is a hypothetical risk of genotoxicity in humans if large amounts of trivalent chromium were somehow able to enter living cells, but normal metabolism and cell function prevent this.
Forms of chromium
and trivalent chromium are chromium ions—they have different numbers of electrons and, therefore, different properties. Trivalent chromium, or chromium, is the form of chromium that is essential to human health. Hexavalent chromium, or chromium, is an unequivocally toxic form.
formed from hexavalent chromium are used to manufacture leather products, paints, cement, mortar, anti-corrosives, and other things. They are carcinogenic and allergenic. The carcinogenity of chromate dust has been documented since the late 19th century, when workers in a chromate dye company were found to exhibit high incidence of cancer. Chromate enters cells by means of the same transport mechanism that carries sulfate and phosphate ions into cells. Contact with products containing chromates can lead to allergic contact dermatitis and irritant dermatitis, resulting in ulceration of the skin—a condition sometimes called chrome ulcers. Workers that have been exposed to strong chromate solutions in electroplating, tanning, and chrome-producing manufacturers may also develop chrome ulcers.
Genotoxicity
Hexavalent chromium is genotoxic: it damages genetic information in living cells, which results in DNA mutations, and possibly the formation of cancerous tumors. One hypothesis asserts that the genotoxicity is caused by free radicals such as hydroxyl radicals, produced by the reduction of chromium to chromium. Another proposed mechanism supposes that chromium binds to DNA at the end of the reduction to chromium. A third hypothesis proposes that two other forms of chromium—Chromium compounds, along with chromium produced by redox reactions in the cell—bind to DNA.
Trivalent chromium
, or chromium, is an essential trace mineral in the human diet. In some nutritional supplements, chromium occurs as chromium picolinate or chromium nicotinate. Nicotinic acid is also known as the B vitaminniacin. Chromium is poorly absorbed in humans; most dietary chromium is excreted in the urine. The threshold for acute oral toxicity is 1900–3300 mg/kg. In rats, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs such as aspirin and indometacin can increase chromium absorption. Ordinarily, cellular transport mechanisms in humans and some other animals limit the amount of chromium that enters a cell. Hypothetically, if an excessive amount was able to enter a cell, free radical damage to DNA might result.