2010
DOI: 10.1080/10937404.2010.538657
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An Exposure-Response Curve for Copper Excess and Deficiency

Abstract: There is a need to define exposure-response curves for both Cu excess and deficiency to assist in determining the acceptable range of oral intake. A comprehensive database has been developed where different health outcomes from elevated and deficient Cu intakes were assigned ordinal severity scores to create common measures of response. A generalized linear model for ordinal data was used to estimate the probability of response associated with dose, duration and severity. The model can account for differences … Show more

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Cited by 58 publications
(53 citation statements)
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“…Severity scoring and categorical regression affords an objective means of integrating data from diverse toxicity endpoints into a single analysis, as has been previously performed. (66,67) Expert elicitation may also be used in integrating scientific evidence that is subject to uncertainty. (68) The organizations might also have different ways of dealing with conflicting data, or in using supporting studies to help resolve uncertainty.…”
Section: Availability Of Traditional International Oel Resourcesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Severity scoring and categorical regression affords an objective means of integrating data from diverse toxicity endpoints into a single analysis, as has been previously performed. (66,67) Expert elicitation may also be used in integrating scientific evidence that is subject to uncertainty. (68) The organizations might also have different ways of dealing with conflicting data, or in using supporting studies to help resolve uncertainty.…”
Section: Availability Of Traditional International Oel Resourcesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Compilation of data on toxicity due to copper excess and deficiency yielded a generalized linear model that was used to estimate adverse responses depending on copper dose or severity of copper limitation, as well as duration of copper misbalance (20). This model indicates that for humans the optimal intake level for Cu is 2.6 mg/day.…”
Section: Copper In Western Dietmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Copper is vital when used in trace amount however, too much uptake leads to an adverse effect on human health such as vomiting, stomach upset or even associated with severe liver and kidney damage. [1,2] The increase in copper contained is increasing day by day in water as well in food. Excess of copper in living cells for a short period causes gastrointestinal diseases and liver or kidney damage.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%