Cesium is a naturally occurring element found combined with other elements in rocks, soil, and dust in low amounts. It is used to make atomic clocks, optical glass, and vacuum tubes. Nuclear explosions or the breakdown of uranium in fuel elements can produce radioactive forms of cesium. Exposure to stable or radioactive cesium occurs from ingesting contaminated food or drinking water or breathing contaminated air. In muscle cells, cesium competes with, and displaces, potassium. Such exposures may cause nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, bleeding, fatigue, muscle weakness, and palpitations. In severe conditions, it can cause cardiac arrhythmia, coma, and even death. Cesium can cause DNA damage which can affect genomic stability. Altered in genomic stability is a hallmark of aging. Thus, cesium toxicity may accelerate aging owing to its contribution to genomic instability.
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What does it mean if your Cesium result is too high?
If cesium levels are slightly elevated in a urine test, it could indicate recent exposure to this element. Cesium is a naturally occurring element found in rocks, soil, and dust at low concentrations. It can enter the human body through various means, such as food, drinking water, and air. The most common source of human exposure to cesium is through the diet. When absorbed, cesium is eventually excreted through urine and feces, and its biological half-life in humans ranges from 15 days in infants to 100-150 days in adults.
While cesium is generally of low toxicity when given to animals, ingesting large doses of cesium chloride has been associated with symptoms such as decreased appetite, nausea, diarrhea, and cardiac arrhythmia. However, the health effects of low environmental doses of cesium or biomonitored levels from low environmental exposures are not well understood. Biomonitoring studies on cesium levels in the urine can provide reference values for assessing exposure and determining whether individuals have been exposed to higher levels of cesium than those found in the general population. However, finding measurable amounts of cesium in the urine does not necessarily imply adverse health effects.
It's worth noting that very high levels of cesium in urine are sometimes associated with the use of cesium chloride as a questionable anti-cancer treatment. However, this specific case refers to extremely elevated levels, and slight elevations may not be directly linked to such treatment.
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