Current research on the relationship between arsenic and body measures is inconclusive. We explored the relationship between arsenic and body measures in a large cohort representative of the United States population.
Data were analyzed from the 2009-2016 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). We examined the relationship between quartiles of urinary arsenic metabolites and BMI as a continuous variable, BMI by obesity category, and waist circumference, using linear regression models without and with adjustment for gender, age, diabetes, hypertension, race, smoking, and alcohol use. A piecewise linear spline model with a knot at 4.26 μg/L/day, the urinary-flow-rate-adjusted dimethylarsinic acid median, modeled a non-linear relationship between dimethylarsinic acid and BMI.
The 6,848 participants were 51.4 % female, 13.6 % diabetic, 37.7 % hypertensive, 40.3 % white, 38 % obese, 20.3 % non-drinkers, and 56.0 % never-smokers. Compared to the lowest quartile, the highest quartile of daily excretion of all urinary arsenic metabolites was associated with lower BMI, waist circumference, and obesity except for dimethylarsinic acid in unadjusted and adjusted analyses. The same relationship was found with analysis of BMI and waist circumference as continuous variables. Urinary-flow-rate-adjusted dimethylarsinic acid was found to have a non-linear relationship with BMI with increasing excretion up to the median (4.78, 95 %CI = 0.30, 9.27; p = 0.04), and decreasing excretion beyond (-0.69, 95 %CI=-1.23, -0.16; p = 0.01).
We found a strong inverse relationship between body measures and daily excretion of all urinary arsenic metabolites except dimethylarsinic acid, which had a positive relationship with BMI up to 4.26 μg/L/day, and an inverse relationship beyond it.
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About The Expert
Melissa Warwick
Catherine Marcelo
Carolyn Marcelo
Jawaid Shaw
Rehan Qayyum
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PubMed