The facts on
chromium
What is chromium?

Chromium,
a "transition" metal, is of intermediate atomic weight
- that is, it is not considered either a heavy metal or a light
metal. It is found primarily in three chemical states depending
on its electrical charge. Common forms are chromium-0, which
has no charge, chromium+3, which has an ionic charge of plus
3, and chromium+6, which has a charge of plus 6.
Chrome metal (the form chromium-0) is the element that makes
steel "stainless." Chromium in this form is hard,
stable, and resistant to chemical changes such as oxidation
or rust. Steel alloyed with chromium is harder and less brittle
than iron and highly rust-resistant. This form of chromium
is also used to coat or "chrome plate" the surface
of other metals to produce a hard, shiny, chemically resistant
surface.
The primary form of chromium found in the environment is chromium+3,
which is also quite stable. This common form of chromium is
always found in a complex with other chemical partners such
as oxygen or chlorine. In these compounds it is very "inert
to substitution", that is, it is resistant to changing
its form or exchanging its chemical partners.
Though small quantities of chromium+6 are found in nature,
most of the chromium in this form is man-made. Chromium+6
is easily and rapidly reduced to chromium+3 by many chemicals
and conditions, so it is not very stable in the environment.
Like chromium+3, chromium+6 is usually found in chemical complexes
with other elements, for example bound with several oxygen
atoms to form chromate. It is very difficult to oxidize chromium+3
to chromium+6, though it can be done with strong oxidizing
agents and very high temperatures. An industrial process called
"roasting" is used to oxidize the chromium+3 derived
from ores into chromium+6, a form used in a wide variety of
commercial products.
Where is chromium found?
Chromium is widely dispersed in the environment. In the Earth's
crust chromium is present at an average of 140 parts per million
(ppm), but is not distributed evenly. High concentrations
of chromium can be found in certain ores, which are mined
commercially.
There are trace amounts of chromium in rocks and soil, in
fresh water and ocean water, in the food we eat and drink
and in the air we breathe. Levels of chromium in the air are
generally higher in urban areas and in places where chromium
wastes or "slag" from production facilities were
used as landfill.
Chromium wastes have been detected in many landfills and toxic
waste sites across the country, usually in combination with
other metals and chemicals. In the Aberjona River watershed
near Boston Massachusetts, industrial wastes containing chromium
contaminated the river and pond sediments. In some areas the
sediments contain as much as one to two percent chromium by
weight. However, recent studies suggest that people living
nearby have received very little exposure to the chromium
from these sediments. The principal impact is ecological in
areas such as this, where concentrations of several toxic
materials collectively threaten aquatic food webs and the
wildlife they support.
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What are the uses of chromium?

Chromium is used in paints, dyes, stains, wood preservatives,
curing compounds, rust inhibitors and many other products.
However, the predominant use of chromium is for production
of stainless steel and in chrome plating. A radioactive form
of chromium is used in medicine to tag, or label, red blood
cells inside the human body. The labeling is permanent for
the lifetime of that cell, so it is a useful way to look at
long-term patterns of blood cell turnover in the body, to
look for evidence of internal bleeding and for similar studies.
Because of commercial demand, chromium-containing ores have
been mined and processed intensively over the past century,
and many industries manufacture or use chromium containing
compounds.
Do we need chromium for health?
Humans need chromium, in the form of chromium+3, for proper
health. However, most people get all the daily chromium they
need from a normal, well-balanced diet.
Nutritionists have learned over the past century that certain
substances, such as vitamins and minerals, are essential to
normal functioning and health. These substances are not made
in the body, so they must come from foods. (The British Navy
discovered this connection in the 1700s, when they observed
that sailors on long sea voyages often developed a condition
called scurvy. Adding citrus fruits such as limes to the sailors'
diets prevented the condition. This is how English sailors
first came to be known as "Limeys.") Since chromium
is present in all foods, and is especially high in certain
plants, few people are deficient in dietary chromium.

The Federal government establishes guidelines for "Essential,
Safe and Adequate Daily Dietary Intake" or ESADDI (formerly
called the Recommended Daily Allowance or RDA) of an essential
vitamin or mineral. For chromium, the recommended ESADDI level
is 50-200 micrograms per day of chromium. Chromium is a standard
component of most multi-vitamin/multi-mineral pills and food
supplements. Chromium is also present in all foods and is especially
high in certain plants. U.S. Department of Agriculture scientists
recently suggested, based on their own studies, that certain
people such as the elderly, diabetics, and others with blood
sugar (glucose) regulation problems can benefit from even higher
levels of chromium, perhaps as high as 500-800 micrograms per
day, which would normally require a supplement tablet. More
controversial is whether the general public needs more chromium
than they get from their diet. Several manufacturers of over-the-counter
chromium supplements have claimed that high doses of chromium
are beneficial for dieting and bodybuilding, but the majority
of controlled, independent studies to date fail to show any
benefit from chromium supplementation for normal individuals.
On the other hand, there is currently no evidence that taking
chromium supplements is necessarily bad for you, since chromium+3
is not very toxic even at relatively high doses.
How does chromium act as a nutrient?
The best known nutritional effect of chromium is that it appears
to assist insulin in regulating blood sugar (glucose) levels.
Insulin is a small protein hormone that is released into the
blood when blood glucose levels get too high. Insulin then binds
to a receptor on the outside of cells, causing them to absorb
more glucose from blood, returning blood glucose levels to normal.
If glucose levels fall too low, other signals in the body prompt
cells to release glucose to the blood. This "seesaw"
glucose regulation is disrupted in people with diabetes, usually
due to a lack of insulin production or a failure of cells to
properly respond to insulin. Chromium appears to enhance the
effects of insulin once insulin binds to its receptor.
Human bodies do not appear to store or absorb chromium+3 very
well, taking up only 1 or 2 percent of the total chromium
available in the intestines from food. But humans do have
a way to take up more chromium when it is needed - the lower
the body's level of chromium, the more efficiently it is taken
up from the intestines. Chromium+3 does not easily cross cell
membranes, and it appears to interact with cells only when
needed, which suggests that it is stored in a form the body
can rapidly mobilize, either in blood or nearby where blood
can easily draw on it.
The form of chromium associated with enhancing insulin's effect
is a complex of several chromium+3 atoms bound together with
amino acids. The response of cells to insulin is much greater
in the presence of this LMWCr complex (also called chromodulin).
The complex appears to be different from the storage form
of chromium in the blood, which is not yet well defined.
Recently, Dartmouth toxicologist
Joshua
Hamilton and his colleagues discovered that chromium
also affects the other side of the "seesaw" that
controls blood glucose levels, increasing cell signals that
offset the effects of insulin. This appears to be through
interaction with another as yet unknown protein receptor on
the surface of cells. The mechanism for this effect and the
identity of this new receptor are intriguing research questions
that remain to be answered. There may also be other uses of
chromium by the body that remain to be discovered.
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Is chromium harmful to humans?
The most common health effect from exposure to chromium is
contact dermatitis - skin inflammation or rash. A small fraction
of the population, between 5 and 10 percent, has an allergic
skin reaction to chromium. Much like other allergies - to
foods, bee stings, cotton, wool - this allergic response is
genetically based. When genetically predisposed individuals
are exposed to chromium compounds their skin can become reddened
and swollen; the condition clears up once exposure stops.
Avoiding skin contact with chromium - in jewelry for example
- is not a problem for most of the general population but
those whose occupations involve daily exposure to chromium
compounds, such as cement workers, may develop chronic allergic
reactions that necessitate changing or modifying their jobs.
In the past, workers in the chrome ore industry who were contact-sensitive
could develop a related asthma-like condition in the lungs
and respiratory tract if they suddenly breathed in large amounts
of chromium-containing dusts. These incidents are rare now
due to modern occupational safety and health practices.
Is chromium in the workplace a health risk?
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In
the United States, all cement contains chromium.
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Until safer workplace practices were adopted in the 1960s, large
numbers of workers were exposed to high levels of chromium+3
and chromium+6 over periods of 30 to 50 years. Studies in the
1930s and others conducted after World War II found higher rates
of respiratory cancers in these workers. A complicating factor
in the post-war studies is that those workers- unlike the workers
of the 1930s - included a very large fraction of lifelong cigarette
smokers. That made it more difficult to determine whether it
was exposure to cigarette smoke or to chromium that was related
to higher rates of lung cancer. Analysis of the workplace studies
indicates that prior to the 1960s workers exposed to high levels
of chromium had four times the risk of developing lung cancer
compared to unexposed people. By comparison, cigarette smoking
is estimated to increase a person's risk of lung cancer ten
to twenty times.
Cigarette smoking has been shown to synergistically increase
the risk of lung cancer for people exposed to certain metals,
such as arsenic, cadmium and nickel as well as other chemicals.
That is, the risk of lung cancer in a smoker exposed to one
of these agents is much higher than what would be predicted
by simply adding the two individual risks together. But recent
studies suggest that, unlike the case with these and many
other lung carcinogen combinations, chromium and cigarette
smoking do not act synergistically with each other. The reason
for this is not clear, but this supports the idea that chromium
is a relatively weak carcinogen even at very high occupational
doses.
Recent studies indicate that people who began working in chromium
industries from the 1960s on under more modern occupational
hygiene conditions have levels of respiratory cancer that
are not significantly different than the general population.
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Is chromium in the environment a health risk?
While industrial hygiene practices have largely reduced or
eliminated health risks from exposure to chromium+6 dusts,
there is growing concern about environmental exposures. For
example, there are sites in the U.S. where large amounts of
chromium-containing wastes have been dumped or used as landfill,
such as in areas of northern New Jersey in the United States.
This led to concern over whether area residents were at risk
of disease from inhaling chromium-contaminated dusts from
these sites. However, studies comparing the health of residents
near these sites to other populations have found no significant
differences. Under these conditions, levels of exposure to
chromium are likely to be below those of concern. However,
the issue is still under active investigation.
Concerns have also been raised about possible health effects
of chromium-contaminated drinking water. However, there is
no evidence to date of a link between chromium exposure from
drinking water and any human health effects. Even under the
higher occupational exposures of the past there is no evidence
for any cancers in humans other than respiratory cancers,
nor is there evidence of cancer from exposures other than
long-term inhalation of chromium+6 dusts. In fact, on a gram-for-gram
basis, chromium is not considered particularly toxic as compared
to other metals, even by ingestion. Chromium+3 has about the
same relative toxicity as table salt in lab animals. Chromium+6
is about twenty times more toxic, but is still hundreds or
thousands of times less toxic than other metals such as cadmium
or mercury.
Can chromium cause cancer?
Shortly after studies showing that workplace exposure to chromium+6
increased the risk of lung cancer, researchers began to examine
how chromium behaves in the human body. In experiments using
cell cultures, investigators found that chromium+6 crosses cell
membranes and gets into the cell much more easily than chromium+3,
which does not normally get into cells. Once inside cells, chromium+6
can damage DNA, the hereditary material of the cell, and this
damage can lead to mutations. Mutations in certain cancer-associated
genes of the cell are believed to be the basis for initiating
cancer.
Scientists found that treating cells with
chromium+3 did not cause DNA damage or mutations, which was
not surprising since chromium+3 did not enter the cell. When
cells were treated with chromium+6, chromium was found attached
to the DNA molecule in various ways to cause damage. Surprisingly,
the form of chromium attached to the DNA was chromium+3, not
chromium+6. How to explain this apparent paradox?
The solution to this puzzle was proposed by Dartmouth chemist
Karen
Wetterhahn and her colleagues in what became known
as the "uptake-reduction model" of chromium toxicity.
The researchers found that chromium+6 could rapidly be reduced
by several small molecules inside the cell to form chromium+3.
During metabolism, chromium passes through several forms that
are highly reactive and unstable. In addition, the process of
chromium reduction can create reactive oxygen and other free
radicals inside the cell. This combination of reactive intermediates
was postulated to be able to attack DNA, leading to the DNA
damage and the chromium binding that was observed. Since they
are unstable, these intermediates are reduced to the stable
chromium+3 found on the DNA at the end of the process. So although
chromium+3 remains outside the cell, chromium+6 is taken up
and is eventually reduced to chromium+3 inside the cell.
The Wetterhahn uptake-reduction model has served as the central
paradigm for the chromium field for the past 20 years, and set
the stage for a more complete understanding of how chromium
behaves in the body. Wetterhahn and other researchers also found
that chromium+6 could also be reduced to chromium+3 by serum
components and other chemicals of the blood outside the cell.
In cell culture, serum is normally added to help feed cells.
However, treatment of cells with chromium+6 in the presence
of serum caused a reduction of the chromium outside the cells
rather than inside. This meant no uptake of the chromium, and
no DNA damage or mutations. So components of the blood appeared
to protect the cell from chromium+6 uptake.

Recent studies have called into question the idea that the 0primary
way chromium+6 causes cancer is by damaging DNA and causing
mutations. First, to produce a relatively small number of mutations
researchers needed to use chromium levels that are hundreds
or thousands of times higher than the levels required by other
agents. Second, there appears to be a long latency time for
the development of cancer in chromium-exposed workers, requiring
as much as 30 to 40 years of exposure. It also appears that
continuous exposure is required, since shorter or disrupted
occupational exposures did not significantly increase cancer
risk. These observations suggest that chromium might be acting
by a mechanism other than, or in addition to causing mutations.
Another class of chemicals that can increase cancer risk slightly
without causing mutations are tumor promoters. These agents
push a cell along the path of cancer development by acting on
mutations caused by other events. To effect cancer rates, tumor
promoters also require a constant rather than single or short
duration exposure. Is chromium+6 acting as a tumor promoter?
It has recently been shown that treating cells with chromium
causes certain cell signaling changes that are more similar
to the effects of tumor promoters than to the effects of mutagens.
These cell signaling events in turn lead to changes in gene
expression . These alterations occur even in the absence of
DNA damage, and at lower doses, suggesting that this may be
a more important mechanism in humans. However, this idea will
require further investigation, and it may be that chromium contributes
to cancer risk by both mechanisms.
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Why is chromium associated with lung cancer?