Using data from a large US health survey, researchers found that high concentrations of tungsten in the body - as measured in urine samples - is strongly linked with an increase in the occurrence of stroke, roughly equal to a doubling of the odds of experiencing the condition.
Conducted by a team from the University of Exeter, the study represents the most comprehensive analysis to date of the potential health effects of the metal.
Higher tungsten levels were found to be strongly associated with an increase in the prevalence of stroke, independent of typical risk factors.
Importantly, the findings showed that tungsten could be a significant risk factor for stroke in people under the age of 50.
While our current exposure to tungsten is thought to be very low, recent years have seen a significant increase in the demand and supply of the material - which is commonly used in consumer products as well as a number of industrial and military products.
"We're not yet sure why some members of the population have higher levels of the metal in their make-up, and an important step in understanding and preventing the risks it may pose to health will be to get to the bottom of how it's ending up in our bodies," said lead author of the research, Dr Jessica Tyrrell, of the University of Exeter Medical School's European Centre for Environment and Human Health.
"Currently we have incredibly limited information on the health effects of individual chemicals and no research has explored how these compounds might interact together to impact human health," he said.
The study was published in the journal PLOS ONE.
