Summary:
The awareness of the effects of metallic mercury vapour on the human immune system has increased only in the last decade. The
regulatory guidelines relating to testing for immunotoxicity of metals are not standardized so far. A full understanding of the relevance of
the tests to man is still incomplete. Immunotoxicity investigation of metals in rodents, with subsequent extrapolation to man, forms the
basis of human risk assessment.
Human contact with mercury vapour is mainly in chloralkali plants and in factories producing controlling and measuring devices.
When the immune system acts as a target of xenobiotic insults, the result can be a decreased resistance to infection, cancers, or immune
disregulation that can induce the development of allergy or autoimmunity (Fig. 1).
This article reviews literature data and our studies concerning the immunotoxicity of metallic mercury vapour. A number of data shows
that mercury exerts a suppressing effect but another data suggest stimulating effects on the human immune system. The results of
immunological monitoring of individuals exposed to mercury vapour were either positive or negative as well as borderline and uncertain
as to the influence of mercury vapour on human immune system. The positive data had no influence on the resistance of workers to infections
and neoplasms.
Skin and mucosa hypersensitivity to metallic mercury is rare.
No positive report that mercury vapour could be carcinogenic in man has appeared up to now.
Key words:
mercury vapour, chloralkali plant, amalgam filling, immunoglobulins, acute phase proteins, autoantibodies,
lymphocyte subpopulations, cytokines, polymorphonuclear leucocytes, NBT
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