Itai-Itai Disease: Causes, Symptoms and Treatment
Itai-Itai disease is a severe chronic cadmium poisoning that causes painful bone softening, fractures, and kidney damage, first documented in Japan.
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Itai-Itai disease is a severe chronic cadmium poisoning that causes painful bone softening, fractures, and kidney damage, first documented in Japan.
What Is Itai-Itai Disease?
Itai-Itai disease (Japanese for "ouch-ouch disease") is a severe chronic illness caused by long-term exposure to cadmium, a toxic heavy metal. It was first identified in Japan in the Toyama Prefecture along the Jinzu River, where mining operations contaminated irrigation water and rice paddies with cadmium. The name reflects the intense pain that patients experienced with even the slightest movement.
Causes
The disease results from chronic cadmium poisoning (cadmium intoxication). Cadmium is a naturally occurring heavy metal that enters the environment primarily through industrial activities such as mining, metal smelting, and battery manufacturing.
- Contaminated drinking water from mining runoff
- Consumption of cadmium-contaminated food, especially rice and vegetables irrigated with polluted water
- Inhalation of cadmium-containing dust in industrial settings
- Long-term, low-dose exposure accumulated over many years
Postmenopausal women with calcium deficiency were particularly vulnerable, as cadmium disrupts the metabolism and absorption of calcium and phosphate in the body.
Symptoms
Symptoms of Itai-Itai disease develop gradually over many years and primarily affect the kidneys and the musculoskeletal system.
Kidney Damage
- Proteinuria: excessive protein excretion in the urine
- Glucosuria (glucose in the urine despite normal blood sugar levels)
- Aminoaciduria (elevated amino acid excretion in the urine)
- Progressive renal insufficiency (reduced kidney function)
Bone Damage
- Osteomalacia: softening of the bones due to impaired mineralization
- Osteoporosis: reduced bone density with increased fracture risk
- Spontaneous fractures, particularly of the spine and ribs
- Severe, generalized skeletal pain with any movement
- Skeletal deformities and reduction in body height
General Symptoms
- Severe fatigue and general weakness
- Waddling gait due to skeletal deformities
- Anemia (reduced red blood cell count)
Diagnosis
Diagnosis is based on a combination of clinical findings, laboratory tests, and a thorough history of cadmium exposure.
- Measurement of cadmium levels in urine and blood
- Urinalysis for proteinuria, glucosuria, and aminoaciduria
- Kidney function markers (creatinine, GFR)
- X-rays and bone density measurement (DXA scan)
- Blood tests for calcium, phosphate, vitamin D, and parathyroid hormone
Treatment
There is no specific treatment capable of fully removing cadmium from the body, as cadmium has a very long biological half-life of 10 to 30 years in the human body. Treatment is therefore primarily symptomatic and supportive.
- Cessation of exposure: immediate and permanent removal from cadmium sources
- Calcium and vitamin D supplementation to treat osteomalacia
- Phosphate supplementation when indicated
- Management of kidney insufficiency (dietary measures, dialysis in advanced cases)
- Pain management to relieve bone pain
- Physiotherapy to maintain mobility
Chelating agents such as EDTA have been investigated but show limited effectiveness against cadmium poisoning and may worsen kidney damage in patients with pre-existing renal impairment.
Prevention and Public Health Significance
Itai-Itai disease is recognized as one of the first documented cases of large-scale environmental poisoning with major public health consequences. It prompted landmark environmental protection legislation in Japan. Prevention relies on strict regulatory limits for cadmium in food, drinking water, and occupational environments. The World Health Organization (WHO) and the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) have established tolerable weekly intake values for dietary cadmium exposure.
References
- Nogawa, K. & Kido, T. (1993): Itai-itai disease and exposure to cadmium. In: Environmental Research, 68(2), 95-102.
- World Health Organization (WHO): Cadmium - Environmental Health Criteria 134. Geneva, WHO Press.
- Satarug, S. et al. (2010): Cadmium, environmental exposure, and health outcomes. In: Environmental Health Perspectives, 118(2), 182-190.
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Related search terms: Itai-Itai Disease + Itai Itai Disease + Itai-Itai Syndrome