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Pharmacology And Toxicology • April 1992<br />

Aluminium-adjuvanted vaccines<br />

transiently increase aluminium levels<br />

in murine brain tissue<br />

Author information<br />

Redhead K1, Quinlan GJ, Das RG, Gutteridge JM.<br />

Division of Bacteriology<br />

National Institute for Biological Standards and Control<br />

Herts., UK<br />

Abstract<br />

Aluminium is widely used as an adjuvant in human vaccines, and children can<br />

often receive up to 3.75 mg of parenteral aluminium during the first six months<br />

of life. We show that intraperitoneal injection of aluminium adsorbed vaccines<br />

into mice causes a transient rise in brain tissue aluminium levels peaking around<br />

the second and third day after injection. This rise is not seen in the saline control<br />

group of animals or with vaccine not containing aluminium. It is likely that<br />

aluminium is transported to the brain by the iron-binding protein transferrin and<br />

enters the brain via specific transferrin receptors.<br />

“... children can often receive up to 3.75 mg<br />

of parenteral aluminium during the first six months of life<br />

We show that intraperitoneal injection of aluminium<br />

adsorbed vaccines into mice causes a transient rise in<br />

brain tissue aluminium levels peaking around the<br />

second and third day after injection.”<br />

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1608913

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