4.7 Article

Pregnant Dutch Women Have Inadequate Iodine Status and Selenium Intake

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 14, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu14193936

Keywords

iodine; selenium; pregnancy; supplement; urine

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Iodine and selenium are crucial for thyroid hormone synthesis, and pregnancy increases the demand for iodine. The study reveals insufficient iodine status and inadequate selenium intake during pregnancy.
Iodine and selenium are essential for thyroid hormone synthesis. Iodine and selenium interact. Pregnancy increases the maternal iodine requirement. We previously reported inadequate iodine status in pregnant Dutch women. Since little is known about their selenium intake, we investigated the iodine status and selenium intake in relation to iodine and selenium supplement use during pregnancy. Iodine status was established in 201 apparently healthy pregnant women as 24 h iodine excretion (24H-UIE; sufficient if median >= 225 mu g), iodine concentration (24H-UIC; >= 150 mu g/L) and iodine/creatinine ratio (24H-UICR; >= 150 mu g/g). Selenium intake was calculated from 24 h selenium excretion. Iodine status in pregnancy proved insufficient (medians: 24H-UIE 185 mu g; 24H-UIC 95 mu g/L; 24H-UICR 141 mu g/g). Only women taking 150 mu g iodine/day were sufficient (median 24H-UIE 244 mu g). Selenium intake was below the Estimated Average Requirement (EAR; 49 mu g/day) in 53.8%, below the Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA; 60 mu g/day) in 77.4% and below the Adequate Intake (AI; 70 mu g/day) in 88.7%. Combined inadequate iodine status and selenium intake

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