---layout: posttitle: Cadmium Issuesauthor: Joe Schwarczsource: McGill Blogs---HYPERLINK "http://blogs.mcgill.ca/oss/2016/03/01/cadmium-issues/"Cadmium IssuesShrek the friendly ogre delighted audiences in the 2010 movie hitβShrek Forever After.β But for fast food giant McDonaldβs, Shrekturned out to be a nightmare. As a cross promotional feature, thecompany introduced a set of glasses decorated with images of Shrek andother characters from the film. After millions of the glasses had beensold, a problem cropped up that led to a large scale recall. The yellowpigment used on the cups turned out to be cadmium sulphide, a substancetoxic even in small amounts. The concern was that the pigment might ruboff on childrenβs hands and end up being ingested if they then puttheir hands into their mouth.Cadmium was discovered in 1817 by Professor Friedrich Strohmeyer inGermany while looking into a problem encountered by apothecaries whowere making calamine lotion for skin care. The process involved heatingβcalamine,β a natural ore of zinc carbonate, to produce zinc oxide,which is the active ingredient in calamine lotion. Sometimes the lotionwould end up with a yellow discolouration which Strohmeyer determinedwas due to a mineral contaminant that he eventually identified as acompound of cadmium.It was the colour of cadmium compounds that led to their firstcommercial use. Artists loved the bright yellow of cadmium sulphide andthe reds and oranges resulting from a mixture of cadmium sulphide andcadmium selenide. Vincent van Gogh used cadmium sulphide to impart theyellow colour to his flowers in his famous βFlowers in a Blue Vase.βUnfortunately, with time, cadmium sulphide oxidizes to cadmium sulphate,which is white, resulting in the original colour of the painting beingslowly altered.Β HYPERLINK"http://www.artnet.com/artists/claude-monet/" \t "_blank" Claude Monetβs famous yellow hues were also achieved with cadmium pigments.Cadmium paints are still used today, although they are being phased out.Indeed, Sweden has submitted a report to the European Chemical Agencyclaiming that artists rinsing their brushes in the sink are responsiblefor spreading cadmium over agricultural land via sewage sludge.Cadmium is a cumulative toxin and the World Health Organization hassuggested 70 micrograms as the maximum daily safe intake. Ingesting somecadmium is unavoidable because it shows up in crops. How does it getthere? Sewage sludge and phosphate rock, both used as fertilizer, canharbour cadmium. As a result, a hamburger can contain about 30micrograms of cadmium that can be traced to the grass or hay the cowate, and ultimately to the soil in which the feed was grown. Coal alsocontains cadmium compounds that can end up in the atmosphere from wherethey find their way into soil via rain. Other cadmium compounds may alsobe released from the nickel-cadmium battery industry, although modernpollution control methods minimize such losses. Cadmium can be also befound in significant amounts as a contaminant in zinc ores and some isreleased into the environment when the ore is mined as well as when itis smelted into zinc.Nobody actually carried out a study to determine how much cadmiumpigment can rub off onto little hands when gripping a Shrek glass, butit could well be less than what is found in the hamburger those handsare clutching. Still, eliminating any avoidable source of cadmium isdesirable, especially since there is suspicion that cadmium compoundsmay be carcinogenic. Cadmium can also build up in joints and the spinecausing a disease that the Japanese have named βItai-Itai,β whichtranslates as βouch-ouch,β due to the painful sounds made by victimsas cadmium accumulates.A classic case of environmental cadmium toxicity can be traced back tothe early 1900s, although its cause was not identified until the 1960s.It was obvious that something was going on in the vicinity of the JinzuRiver and its tributaries in China. People were getting sick, screamingin pain and dying prematurely. Suspicion fell on the river and themining companies that for years and years had been disgorging theirwastes into the water. The mountains upstream were rich in minerals thatcontained silver, lead, copper and zinc, and mines had been operatingthere for centuries. As demand for these metals increased in thetwentieth century, more and more mining wastes found their way into theriver, including increased amounts of cadmium ores.River water was used for irrigation of rice fields, and since riceabsorbs cadmium effectively, the metal accumulated in the food supplyand consequently in the bodies of the population. The result wasouch-ouch disease. Although cadmium was only identified as the causearound 1965, by the late 1940s it had become obvious that the diseasewas linked to the water supply and mining companies began to store theirwastes instead of releasing them into the river. This prevented morepeople from contracting cadmium poisoning, but nobody really knows howmany victims the mining operations had since they began to pollute theJinzu River back in the sixteenth century.In 1966 in England a construction worker died and several others weresickened as a result of inhaling cadmium fumes. The men were using awelding torch to remove bolts as they were dismantling a constructiontower used in the building of a bridge. It is common practice toelectroplate steel bolts with cadmium, particularly those exposed towater. This is especially useful when there is contact with sea watersince cadmium reacts with salt to form an impervious layer of cadmiumchloride. In this case the men inhaled the cadmium vapourized by theheat of the welding torch and suffered an acute reaction.Shrek glasses are not the only items aimed at children that have causeda concern about cadmium. With lead being non-grata, cadmium has beenturning up in jewelry aimed at young girls, mostly originating in China.If pieces are accidentally swallowed, or if the jewelry comes intofrequent contact with the mouth, enough cadmium may enter thecirculation to cause harm. Jewelry made with cadmium should to go theway of the Shrek glasses.ΒJoe Schwarcz PhD β March 1/2016