Summary
In the case of mineral carcinogenic substances, the relation already established for organic carcinogenic substances with histamine is apparent. Silver, nickel, cobalt, chronium, and berryllium form well-characterized complexes with histamine.
References
S. Hatem, Exper.15, 219 (1959).
S. Hatem, Exper.16, 158 (1960).
P. Job, Ann. Chim.9, 113 (1928).
B. S. Oppenheimer, R. Oppenheimer, I. Danishegski etA. P. Stout, Cancer Res.16, 435 (1956).
W. C. Hueper, J. nat. Cancer Inst.16, 55 (1955).
G. Morgan, Brit. J. ind. Med.15, 224 (1958).
S. Hatem, Chimia14, 130 (1960).
J. C. Heath, Brit. J. Cancer10, 668 (1956).
H. R. Schinz etE. Uehlinger, Z. Krebsforsch.52, 425 (1942).
Ch. Grogan, Cancer Philad.4, 625 (1957).
S. Hatem, C. R. Soc. Biol., Paris153, 574 (1959).
A. J. Worwald, Occup. Med.5, 684 (1948).
J. M. Barnes, F. A. Denz etH. A. Sissons, Brit. J. Cancer4, 212 (1950).
R. Frank etM. D. Dutra, Arch. ind. Hyg.3, 81 (1951).
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Hatem, S. Histamine et métaux cancérigènes. Experientia 16, 494–495 (1960). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02158356
Published:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02158356