4.7 Article

Iodine Deficiency in a Study Population of Norwegian Pregnant Women-Results from the Little in Norway Study (LiN)

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 10, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu10040513

Keywords

urinary iodine concentration; iodine to creatinine ratio; supplement; milk and dairy products; seafood; iodine status; pregnant

Funding

  1. Research Council of Norway [196156]
  2. Norwegian Seafood Research Fund, FHF grant [900842]

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Iodine sufficiency is particularly important in pregnancy, where median urinary iodine concentration (UIC) in the range of 150-250 mu g/L indicates adequate iodine status. The aims of this study were to determine UIC and assess if dietary and maternal characteristics influence the iodine status in pregnant Norwegian women. The study comprises a cross-sectional population-based prospective cohort of pregnant women (Little in Norway (LiN)). Median UIC in 954 urine samples was 85 mu g/Land 78.4% of the samples (n = 748) were <= 150 mu g/L. 23.2% (n = 221) of the samples were <= 50 mu g/L and 5.2% (n = 50) were above the requirements of iodine intake (>250 mu g/L). Frequent iodine-supplement users (n = 144) had significantly higher UIC (120 mu g/L) than non-frequent users (75 mu g/L). Frequent milk and dairy product consumers (4-9 portions/day) had significantly higher UIC (99 mu g/L) than women consuming 0-1 portion/day (57 mu g/L) or 2-3 portions/day (83 mu g/L). Women living in mid-Norway (n = 255) had lowest UIC (72 mu g /L). In conclusion, this study shows that the diet of the pregnant women did not necessarily secure a sufficient iodine intake. There is an urgent need for public health strategies to secure adequate iodine nutrition among pregnant women in Norway.

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