Abstract

This study aims to measure the liver enzymes among gold mining workers and compare them with a group of healthy subjects as a control sample. This cross-sectional study was conducted Alabedia market, Nile River, Sudan. The study included 70 people, the gold prospectors by mercury as a test group (50 people) and healthy (20 people) as a control group. The venous blood samples were collected from the two groups to measure the rates of Hg liver enzymes. Statistical analysis of the results reviled that, there was a significant increase in serum level of ALP in the test group (82.8 IU/L) when compared with the control group (70.25.1IU/L) with a P. value of 0.013, and an increase in serum level of ALT in the test group was (21.18 IU/L) when compared with a control group of (26.96.1IU/L) with P. value of 0.003. Statistical analysis of the results reviled that, there was no significant increase in serum level of AST when compared with a control group with a P-value of 0.071. The mean level of serum mercury in the test group was (62.17) and in the control group was (0.72) with P. value of <0.001. This study established that there is a significant increase in the levels of serum mercury compared to the control group. The new workers are more exposed to mercury than the older workers because the new workers have no experience in contact with gold mining extraction.

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