## Correct Answer: B. Arsenic Arsenic is a classic heavy metal toxin that causes acute and chronic poisoning with a distinctive renal and muscular injury pattern. The mechanism involves arsenic binding to sulfhydryl groups (-SH) in cellular proteins and enzymes, disrupting oxidative metabolism and cellular respiration. In the kidneys, arsenic preferentially damages the **proximal convoluted tubule (PCT)**, the primary site of active reabsorption and secretion. This tubular damage manifests as **proteinuria** (often in the nephrotic range in acute poisoning) and acute tubular necrosis. Systemically, arsenic causes myositis and myonecrosis, leading to **muscle pain and weakness** (myalgia). The combination of PCT damage with proteinuria + myalgia is pathognomonic for arsenic poisoning. In India, arsenic exposure occurs through contaminated groundwater (particularly in West Bengal, Assam, Bihar) and occupational exposure in pesticide manufacturing. Acute arsenic poisoning presents with gastrointestinal symptoms, hypotension, and cardiac arrhythmias, while chronic exposure causes skin changes (hyperkeratosis, hyperpigmentation), peripheral neuropathy, and renal dysfunction. The renal involvement is dose-dependent and reversible in early stages but can progress to chronic kidney disease with continued exposure. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Mercury** — Mercury causes **membranous glomerulonephritis** with nephrotic syndrome, NOT proximal tubule damage. While mercury does cause proteinuria, the mechanism is immune-mediated glomerular injury (from mercury-protein complexes), not direct tubular necrosis. Mercury also causes tremor and neuropsychiatric symptoms (erethism), not myalgia. The renal pathology is fundamentally different from arsenic's tubular injury. **C. Chromium** — Chromium (especially hexavalent Cr⁶⁺) causes **acute tubular necrosis and acute kidney injury**, but the primary clinical presentation is respiratory (pulmonary carcinogen) and dermatologic (contact dermatitis, ulcers). Chromium does not characteristically cause myalgia or muscle pain. Occupational exposure in tanneries and electroplating is the main concern in India, but muscle involvement is not a hallmark feature. **D. Lead** — Lead causes **Fanconi syndrome** (proximal tubular dysfunction with glycosuria, phosphaturia, aminoaciduria) and chronic kidney disease, but NOT acute proximal tubule necrosis with proteinuria. Lead's classic presentation includes abdominal colic, anemia (sideroblastic), and encephalopathy in children, not myalgia. Lead-induced renal disease is chronic and manifests as hypertension and progressive renal insufficiency, not acute myositis. ## High-Yield Facts - **Arsenic + proximal tubule damage** = acute tubular necrosis with proteinuria and myalgia (pathognomonic triad) - **Arsenic mechanism** = binds sulfhydryl groups, inhibits pyruvate dehydrogenase and cellular respiration - **Arsenic in India** = endemic in groundwater (West Bengal, Assam, Bihar); major public health concern affecting millions - **Acute arsenic poisoning** = GI symptoms, hypotension, cardiac arrhythmias, followed by renal and neurological involvement - **Chronic arsenic exposure** = skin changes (hyperkeratosis, hyperpigmentation), peripheral neuropathy, increased cancer risk (lung, skin, bladder) - **Mercury vs Arsenic** = Mercury → membranous GN (immune-mediated); Arsenic → tubular necrosis (direct toxic) ## Mnemonics **ARSENIC Renal Triad** **A**cute **R**enal **S**yndrome = **E**ndothelial damage + **N**ecrosis of **I**nterstitium + **C**onvoluted tubule injury. Remember: Arsenic damages the proximal tubule directly, causing proteinuria + myalgia. **Heavy Metal Renal Patterns (MACH)** **M**ercury = Membranous GN | **A**rsenic = Acute tubular necrosis | **C**hromium = Chronic AKI | **H**eavy metals = Lead = Fanconi. Use this to differentiate renal injury patterns across heavy metals. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs "proximal tubule damage" with mercury (which causes glomerular disease, not tubular necrosis) to trap students who confuse heavy metal nephrotoxicity patterns. The key discriminator is that arsenic causes **direct tubular necrosis with myalgia**, while mercury causes immune-mediated glomerular disease. ## Clinical Pearl In endemic arsenic areas of India (West Bengal, Assam), chronic exposure presents insidiously with renal dysfunction + skin changes + neuropathy. Acute poisoning (intentional or accidental) shows the classic triad of GI symptoms, renal tubular damage (proteinuria), and myalgia within 24–48 hours—this combination should immediately raise suspicion for arsenic and prompt dimercaprol (BAL) therapy if given early. _Reference: Robbins Ch. 10 (Kidney pathology); KD Tripathi Ch. 58 (Heavy metal toxicology); Park's Textbook of Preventive and Social Medicine (Arsenic contamination in India)_
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