Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-8ctnn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-18T23:21:57.809Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Spatial relationship between arsenic in drinking water and Mycobacterium ulcerans infection in the Amansie West district, Ghana

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2018

A. A. Duker*
Affiliation:
International Institute for Geo-information Science and Earth Observation, Enschede, The Netherlands
E. J. M. Carranza
Affiliation:
International Institute for Geo-information Science and Earth Observation, Enschede, The Netherlands
M. Hale
Affiliation:
International Institute for Geo-information Science and Earth Observation, Enschede, The Netherlands
*

Abstract

This paper hypothesizes that arsenic in drinking water indirectly contributes to Buruli ulcer (BU), a skin disease caused by Mycobacterium ulcerans (MU) infection. Samples of groundwater and surface water used as drinking water by the population in Ghana's Amansie West district (part of which has a high prevalence of BU), were collected near rural settlements and analysed for arsenic. Arsenic concentration levels per settlement were compared with BU prevalence. A positive exposure-response relationship was obtained between arsenic in surface water and BU (r2 = 0.82). However, there is no significant exposure-response relation between groundwater and BU.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland 2005

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abernathy, C.O., Lui, Y.P., Longfellow, D., Aposhian, H.V., Beck, B., Fowler, B., Goyer, R., Menzer, R., Rossman, T., Thompson, C. and Waalkes, M. (1999) Arsenic: health effects, mechanisms of actions and research issues. Environmental Health Perspectives, 107, 593597.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ahmad, S., Kitchin, K.T. and Cullen, W.R. (2000) Arsenic species that cause release of iron from ferritin and generation of activated oxygen. Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics, 382, 195202.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Amofah, G.K., Sagoe-Moses, C., Adjei-Acquah, C. and Frimpong, E.H. (1993) Epidemiology of Buruli ulcer in the Amansie West District, Ghana. Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 87, 644645.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Amofah, G., Bonsu, F., Tetteh, C., Okrah, J., Asamoa, K., Asiedu, K. and Addy, J. (2002) Buruli ulcer in Ghana: Results of the national case search. CDC: Emerging Infectious Diseases, 8, http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/eid/vol8no2/01-0119.htm. Accessed (23rf September 2002).Google ScholarPubMed
Aranyi, C., Bradof, J.N., O'Shea, W.J., Graham, J.A. and Miller, F.J. (1985) Effects of arsenic trioxide inhalation exposure on preliminary antibacterial defenses in mice. Archives of Environmental Health, 41, 171177.Google Scholar
Asiedu, K. and Etuaful, S. (1998) Socio-economic implications of Buruli ulcer in Ghana: a three-year review. American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 59, 10151022.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Astolfi, E. (1971) Estudio de arsenicismo en agua de consumo. Prensa Medica Agentina, 58, 1342–43.Google Scholar
ATSDR (Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry) (2000) Toxicological profile for arsenic: Health effects chapter, http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/toxpro2.html#Final. Acessed (2nd September 2002).Google Scholar
Aujoulat, I., Johnson, C., Zinsou, C., Guédénon, A. and Portaels, F. (2003) Psychosocial aspects of health seeking behaviours of patients with Buruli ulcer in southern Benin. Tropical Medicine and International Health, 8, 750759.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bár, W., Rüsch-Gerdes, S., Richter, E., Marquéz de Bár, G., Dittmer, C.h., Papsdorf, H., Stosiek, P., de Rijk, P.B., Meyers, W.M. and Portaels, F. (1998) Mycobacterium ulcerans infection in a child from Angola: diagnosis by direct detection and culture. Tropical Medicine and International Health, 3, 189196.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barker, D.J.P. (1973) Epidemiology of Mycobacterium ulcerans infection. Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 67, 4350.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bhaskaram, P., Hemalatha, R. and Narayana, G. (2003) Expression of messenger ribonucleic acid and production of cytokines in children with malnutrition. Nutrition Research, 23, 367376.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blakely, B.R., Sisodia, C.S. andMokkur, T.K. (1980) The effects of methylmercury, tetraethyl lead and sodium arsenite on humoral immune response in mice. Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology, 52, 245254.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bogner, J.R., Gathof, B., Heinrich, B., Matuschke, A., Backer, U. and Goebel, F.D. (1990) Erythrocyte antibodies in AIDS are associated with mycobacteriosis and hypergammaglobulinemia. Klinische Wochenschrift, 68, 10501053.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Borgono, J.M. and Greiber, R. (1972) Epidemiological study of arsenism in the city of Antofagasta. Pp. 1324 in: Trace Substances in Environmental Health, Vol. 5 (Hemphill, D. C., editor). University of Missouri, Columbia.Google Scholar
Chen, C.J., Chuang, Y.C., Lin, T.M. and Wu, H.Y. (1985) Malignant neoplasms among residents of a Blackfoot disease-endemic area in Taiwan: High-arsenic artesian well water and cancers. Cancer Research, 45, 58955899.Google ScholarPubMed
Chen, C.J., Chuang, Y.C., You, S.L., Lin, T.M. and Wu, H.Y. (1986) A retrospective study on malignant neoplasms of bladder, lung, and liver in a Blackfoot disease-endemic area in Taiwan. British Journal of Cancer, 53, 399405.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cunningham-Rundles, S. and Lin, D.H. (1998) Nutrition and the immune system of the gut. Nutrition, 14, 573579.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Das, D., Samanta, G., Mandal, B.K., Roy Chowdhury, T., Chanda, C.R., Chowdhury, P.P., Basu, B.K. and Chakraborti, D. (1996) Arsenic in groundwater in six districts of West Bengal, India. Environmental Geochemistry and Health, 18, 515.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Del Razo, L.M., Styblo, M., Cullen, W.R. and Thomas, D.J. (2001) Determination of trivalent methylated arsenicals in biological matrices. Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology, 174, 282293.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Duker, A.A., Carranza, E.J.M. and Hale, M. (2004) Spatial dependency of Buruli ulcer prevalence on arsenic-enriched domains in Amansie West District, Ghana: implications for arsenic mediation in Mycobacterium ulcerans infection. International Journal of Health Geographies, 3, 19.Google ScholarPubMed
Edler, L., Poirier, K., Dourson, M., Kleiner, J., Mileson, B., Nordmann, H., Renwick, A., Slob, W., Walton, K. and Wurtzen, G. (2002) Mathematical modeling and quantitative methods. Food Chemistry Toxicology, 40, 283326.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Evans, J.S., Rhomberg, L.R., Williams, P.L., Wilson, A.M. and Baird, J.S. (2001) Reproductive and developmental risks from ethylene oxide: A probabilistic characterization of possible regulatory thresholds. Risk Analysis, 21, 697718.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fernandes, G., Nair, M., Onoe, K., Tanaka, T., Floyd, R. and Good, R.A. (1976) Impairment of cell-mediated immunity functions by dietary zinc deficiency in mice. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, USA, 76, 457.Google Scholar
Frenkel, K., Rossman, T.G. and Yang, C.F. (2002) Cafeic acid phenethyl ester (CAPE) prevents arsenic-mediated transformation of human cells and down-regulation of inflammatory cytokines. Paper presented at the International Symposium on Predictive Oncology and Intervention Strategies, Paris.Google Scholar
Gascon, P., Sathe, S.S. and Rameshwar, P. (1993) Impaired erythropoiesis in the acquired immune deficiency syndrome with disseminated Mycobacterium avium complex. American Journal of Medicine, 94, 4148.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gerdsen, R., Stockfleth, E., Uerlich, M., Fartasch, M., Steen, K.H. and Bieber, T. (2000) Papular palmo-plantar hyperkeratosis following chronic medical exposure to arsenic: human papillomavirus as a co-factor in the pathogenesis of arsenical keratosis. Acta Dermatological Venereologica, 80, 292293.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Golden, M.H.N., Harland, P.S.E.G., Golden, B.E. and Jackson, A.A. (1978) Zinc and immunocompetence in protein-energy malnutrition. The Lancet, 311, 12261228.Google Scholar
Gonseblatt, M.E., Vega, L., Montero, R., Garcia-Vargas, G., Del Razo, L.M., Albores, A., Cebrian, M.E. and Ostrosky-wegman, P. (1994) Lymphocyte replicating ability in individuals exposed to arsenic via drinking water. Mutation Research, 313, 293299.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Good, R.A., Fernandes, G., Cunningham-Rundles, C., Cunningham-Rundles, S., Garofalo, J.A., Rao, K.M.K., Incefy, G.S. and Iwata, T. (1980) The relation of zinc deficiency to immunologic function in animals and man. P. 223 in: Primary Immunodeficiencies, vol. 16 (Selignam, M. and Hitzig, W.H., editors). Elsevier, Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Gooding, T.M., Johnson, P.D.R., Campbell, D.E., Hayman, J.A., Hartland, E.L., Kemp, A.S. and Robins-Browne, R.M. (2001) Immune response to infection wit. Mycobacterium ulcerans. Infection and Immunity, 69, 17041707.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gooding, T.M., Johnson, P.D.R., Smith, M., Kemp, A.S. and Robins-Browne, R.M. (2002) Cytokine profiles of patients infected with Mycobacterium ulcerans and unaffected household contacts. Infection and Immunity, 70, 55625567.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Grantham, S.A. and Jones, J.P. (1977) Arsenic contamination of water wells in Nova Scotia. Journal of the American Water Works Association, 69, 653657.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grimmel, M., De Villiers, E.M., Neumann, C., Pawlita, M. and zur Hausen, H. (1988) Characterization of a new human papillomavirus (HPV 41) from disseminated warts and detection of its DNA in some skin carcinomas. International Journal of Cancer, 41, 59.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Harada, M. (1996) Characteristics of industrial poisoning and environmental contamination in developing countries. Environmental Science MY, Tokyo, 4 (suppl.), 157169.Google Scholar
Hatch, G.E., Boykin, E., Graham, J.A., Lewtas, J., Pott, F., Loud, K. and Mumford, J.L. (1985) Inhalable particles and pulmonary host defense; in vivo and in vitro effects of ambient air and combustion particles. Environmental Research, 36, 6780.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hopenhayn-Rich, C., Biggs, M.L., Fuchs, A., Bergoglio, R., Tello, E.E., Nicolli, H. and Smith, A. (1996) Bladder cancer mortality associated with arsenic in drinking water in Argentina. Epidemiology, 7, 117124.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hopenhayn-Rich, C., Biggs, M.L. and Smith, A.H. (1998) Lung and kidney cancer mortality associated with arsenic in drinking water in Córdoba, Argentina. International Journal of Epidemiology, 27, 561569.Google ScholarPubMed
Houssaïni, F.Z.S., Iraqi, M.R., Arnaud, J., Richard, M.J. and Favier, A. (1997) Trace elements and protein-calorie malnutrition in the Fés area (Morocco). Biomedical Pharmacotherapy, 51, 349351.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lantz, R.C., Parliman, G., Chen, G.J. and Carter, D.E. (1994) Effects of arsenic exposure on alveolar macrophage function. I. Effects of soluble As (in) and As (V). Environmental Research, 67, 183195.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Levinsky, W.J., Smalley, R.V., Hillyer, P.N. and Shtndler, R.L. (1970) Arsine hemolysis. Archives of Environmental Health, 20, 436440.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lin, N.-F. and Tang, J. (1999) Environmental characteristic of arseniasis area in China. Scienta Geographica Sinica, 19, 135139.Google Scholar
Lin, N.-F., Tang, J. and Bian, J.-M. (2002) Characteristics of environmental geochemistry in the arseniasis area of the Inner Mongolia of China. Environmental Geochemistry and Health, 24, 249259.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lin, S.M. and Yang, M.H. (1988) Arsenic, selenium, and zinc in patients with Blackfoot disease. Biological Trace Element Research, 15, 213221.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Marston, B.J., Diallo, M.O., Horsburgh, R.C., Diomande, I., Saki, M.Z., Kanga, M., Patrice, G., Lipman, H.B., Ostroff, S.M. and Good, R.C. (1995) Emergence of Buruli ulcer disease in Daloa region of Côte d'lvoire. American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 52, 219224.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McMurray, D.N. (1984) Cell-mediated immunity in nutritional deficiency. Programme for Food Nutrition Science, 8, 193228.Google ScholarPubMed
McMurray, D.N., Bartow, R.A., Mintzer, C.L. and Hernandez-Frontera, E. (1990) Micronutrient status and immune function in tuberculosis. Annals of the Academy of Science, NY, 587, 5969.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Miyazaki, K., Ushijima, K., Kadono, T., Inaoka, T., Watanabe, C. and Ohtsuka, R. (2003) Negative correlation between urinary selenium and arsenic levels of the residents living in an arsenic-contaminated area in Bangladesh. Journal of Health Science, 49, 239242.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mudur, G. (2000) Half of Bangladesh population at risk of arsenic poisoning. British Medical Journal, 320, 822.Google ScholarPubMed
Mve-Obiang, A., Lee, R.E., Portaels, F. and Small, P.L.C. (2003) Heterogeneity of mycolactones produced by clinical isolates of Mycobacterium ulcerans: Implications for virulence. Infection and Immunity, 71, 774783.Google ScholarPubMed
NRC (National Research Council) (1999) Arsenic in drinking water. National Research Council, Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press.Google Scholar
Ochi, Y., Nakajime, F., Sakurai, T., Kaise, T. and Oya-Ohta, Y. (1996) Dimethylarsenic acid causes apoptosis in HL-60 via interaction with glutathione. Archives of Toxicology, 70, 815821.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Parish, G.G., Glass, R. and Kimbrough, R. (1979) Acute arsine poisoning in two workers cleaning a clogged drain. Archives of Environmental Health, 34, 224227.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Petrick, J.S., Ayala-Fierro, F., Cullen, W.R., Carter, D.E. and Aposhian, H.V. (2000) Monomethylarsonous acid (MMAIII) is more toxic than arsenite in Chang human hepatocytes. Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology, 163, 203207.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Petrick, J.S., Bhumasamudram, J., Mash, E.A. and Aposhian, H.V. (2001) Monomethylarsonous acid (MMAIII) and arsenite: LD50 in hamsters and in vitro inhibition of pyruvate dehydrogenase. Chemical Research in Toxicology, 14, 651656.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pszolla, N., Sarkar, M.R., Strecker, W., Kern, P., Kinzl, L., Meyers, W.M. and Portaels, F. (2003) Buruli ulcer: A systemic disease. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 37, 7882.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Reymann, F., Moller, R. and Nielsen, A. (1978) Relationship between arsenic intake and internal malignant neoplasms. Archives of Dermatology, 114, 378381.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Robb, L.J., Yao, Y., Armstrong, R.A. and Murphy, P.J. (1999) Gold in the Birimian granites of Ghana: a metamorphic origin. Pp. 1033–6 in: Mineral Deposits: Processes to Processing (Stanley, C.J. et al., editors). Proceedings of the fifth Biennial SGA Meeting and tenth Quadrennial IAGOD Symposium, London, A.A. Balkema, Rotterdam.Google Scholar
Rodriguez, G.M. and Smith, I. (2003) Mechanisms of iron regulation in mycobacteria: role in physiology and virulence. Molecular Microbiology, 47, 14851494.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rosales-Castillo, J.A., Acosta-Saavedra, L.C., Torres, R., Ochoa-Fierro, J., Borja-Aburto, V.H., Lopez-Carrillo, L., Garcia-Vargas, G.G., Gurrola, G.B., Cebrian, M.E. and Calderón-Aranda, E.S. (2004) Arsenic exposure and human papillomavirus response in non-melanoma skin cancer Mexican patients: a pilot study. International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health, 11, 418423.Google Scholar
Sakamoto, M., Fujisawa, Y. and Nishioka, K. (1998) Physiologic role of the complement system in host defense, disease, and malnutrition. Nutrition, 14, 391398.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sarkodie, P.H., Nyamah, D. and Amonoo-Niezer, E.H. (1997) Speciation of arsenic in some biological samples from Obuasi and its surrounding villages. Pp. 146154 in: National symposium proceedings — the mining industry and the environment, April 1415, Kumasi, UST.Google Scholar
Sathe, S.S., Gascone, P., Lo, W., Pinto, R. and Reichman, L.B. (1990) Severe anaemia is an important negative predictor for survival with disseminated Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. American Reviews of Respiratory Disease, 142, 13061312.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Schrauzer, G.N. (1987) Effects of selenium antagonists on cancer susceptibility: new aspects of chronic heavy metal toxicity. Journal of the University of Occupation and Environmental Health, 9 (suppl.), 208215.Google ScholarPubMed
Smedley, P.L., Edmunds, W.M. and Pelig-Ba, K.B. (1996) Mobility of arsenic in groundwater in the Obuasi gold-mining area of Ghana: some implications for health. Pp. 163–81 in: Environmental Geochemistry and Health (Appleton, J.D., Fuge, R., McCall, G.J.H., editors). Special Publication 11, Geological Society, London.Google Scholar
Smith, D.R., Ilustre, R.P. and Osterloh, J.D. (1998) Methodological considerations for the accurate determination of lead in human plasma and serum. American Journal of Industrial Medicine, 33, 430438.3.0.CO;2-W>CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Stienstra, Y., van der Graaf, W.T.A., te Meerman, G.J., The, T.H., de Leij, L.F. and van der Werf, T.S. (2001) Susceptibility to development of Mycobacterium ulcerans disease: review of possible risk factors. Tropical Medicine and International Health, 6, 554562.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Styblo, M., Del Razo, L.M., Vega, L., Germolec, D.R., LeCluyse, E.L., Hamilton, G.A., Reed, W., Wang, C., Cullen, W.R. and Thomas, D.J. (2000) Comparative toxicity of trivalent and pentavalent inorganic and methylated arsenicals in rat and human cells. Archives of Toxicology, 74, 289299.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Styblo, M., Drobna, Z., Jasper, I., Lin, S. and Thomas, D.J. (2002) The role of biomethylation in toxicity and carcinogenicity of arsenic: a research update. Environmental Health Perspectives, 110 (suppl. 5), 767771.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sugarman, B. (1980) Effects of heavy metals on bacterial adherence. Journal of Medical Microbiology, 13, 351354.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Thornton, I. (1996) Sources and pathways of arsenic in the geochemical environment: health implications. Pp. 153–61 in: Environmental Geochemistry and Health with Special Reference to Developing Countries (Appleton, J.D., Fuge, R., McCall, G.J.H., editors). Special Publication 113, Geological Society, London.Google Scholar
Tseng, W.P., Chu, H.M., How, S.W., Fong, J.M., Lin, C.S. and Yeh, S. (1968) Prevalence of skin cancer in an endemic area of chronic arsenism in Taiwan. Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 40, 453463.Google Scholar
US EPA (1988) Special Report on Ingested Arsenic: Skin Cancer; Nutritional Essentiality. Prepared for the Risk Assessment Forum U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, D.C. EPA/625/ 3-87/013.Google Scholar
Vahter, M. and Envall, J. (1983) In vivo reduction of arsenate in mice and rabbits. Environmental Research, 32, 1424.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
van der Werf, T.S., van der Graaf, W.T.A., Tappero, J.W. and Asiedu, K. (1999) Mycobacterium ulcerans infection. The Lancet, 354, 10131018.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Vega, L., Ostrosky-Wegman, P., Fortoul, T.I., Diaz, C., Madrid, V. and Saavedra, R. (1999) Sodium arsenite reduces proliferation of human activated T-cells by inhibition of the secretion of interleukin-2. Immunopharmacology and Immunotoxicology, 21, 203220.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Vruwink, K.G., Heen, C.L., Gershwin, M.E., Mareschi, J.P. and Hurley, L.S. (1993) The effect of experimental zinc deficiency on development of the immune system. Pp. 263279 in: Nutrient Modulation of the Immune Response (Cunningham-Rundles, S., editor). Marcel Dekker, New York, NY.Google Scholar
Weinberg, E.D. (1978) Iron and Infection. FEMS Microbiology Reviews, 42, 45.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Weir, E. (2002) Buruli ulcer: the third most common mycobacterial infection. Canadian Medical Association Journal, 166, 1691.Google ScholarPubMed
WHO (World Health Organization) (2001) Arsenic in Drinking Water. Fact Sheet No. 210 (revised May 2001).Google Scholar
Winski, S.L. and Carter, D.E. (1995) Interaction of the rat blood cell sulfhydryls with arsenate and arsenite. Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health, 46, 379397.Google ScholarPubMed
Yamanaka, K., Hasegawa, A., Sawamura, R. and Okada, S. (1991) Cellular response to oxidative damage in lung induced by the administration of dimethylarsinic acid, a major metabolite of inorganic arsenics, in mice. Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology, 108, 205213.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yang, L., Peterson, P.J., Williams, W.P., Wang, W., Hou, S. and Tan, J.-An. (2002) The relationship between exposure to arsenic concentrations in drinking water and the development of skin lesions in farmers from Inner Mongolia, China. Environmental Geochemistry and Health, 24, 293303.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zaldivar, R. (1974) Arsenic contamination of drinking water and foodstuffs causing endemic chronic poisoning. Beitrage zur Pathologie, 151, 384400.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed