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2.
J Trace Elem Med Biol ; 37: 85-89, 2016 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27421794

ABSTRACT

Iodine is essential for the synthesis of thyroid hormones. These regulate metabolism, promote growth, development and maturation of all organs, especially the brain. Most iodine is found in oceans and most continental soil and ground water is deficient in iodine. Therefore, around 2 billion individuals are estimated to have insufficient iodine intake and are at risk of iodine deficiency disorders. The best carrier for save iodine supplementation is salt, as the daily intake of salt is mainly constant. Due to the collaboration between international and national organisations and the salt industry, many developing and developed countries introduced universal salt iodization (USI) or have mandatory or voluntary fortification programs. In Germany as in most European countries the use of iodized salt is voluntary not only in household but also in the food industry. Two recent epidemiological surveys in Germany revealed that 33% of children and 32% of adults are still suffering from mild to moderate iodine deficiency. The best surrogate parameter for iodine deficiency is goitre. The goitre prevalence is around 30% in children as well as in adults which is in accordance with the documented iodine deficiency. From other European countries epidemiological derived data on iodine intake are only available from Denmark and Poland. Further efforts are under way to reveal the iodine status with proper methods in all European countries. On this background it might be possible to establish adequate iodine fortification programs in all European countries.


Subject(s)
Diet/statistics & numerical data , Iodine/administration & dosage , Europe , Germany , Humans , Iodine/deficiency
3.
Arch Gynecol Obstet ; 287(1): 1-7, 2013 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23104052

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: During pregnancy, physiologic changes in maternal thyroid function take place especially due to hormonal as well as metabolic processes. Human chorionic gonadotropin activates the maternal thyroid gland leading to increased thyroid hormone production. A sufficient availability of maternal thyroid hormones is essential for fetal development, especially during the first trimester of pregnancy, when the fetal thyroid gland is not yet functional. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Current knowledge of thyroid dysfunction including thyroid autoimmunity, hypothyroidism or hyperthyroidism is summarized with special focus on miscarriage and pregnancy disorders. Therefore, a Medline research as well as an analysis of current guidelines on thyroid function and pregnancy was performed. RESULTS: A study focusing on TSH levels in normal and disturbed pregnancies, the risk of miscarriage in association with thyroid autoantibodies, and (subclinical) hypothyroidism in infertile and fertile women were included. CONCLUSION: Maternal thyroid dysfunction negatively affects pregnancy outcome. Besides a routine iodine supplementation in pregnant women and treatment of hypo as well as hyperthyroidism, TSH levels should routinely be measured in women during childbearing years and adjusted to concentrations <2.5 mIU/l in order to optimize maternal health and fetal development.


Subject(s)
Pregnancy Complications , Thyroid Diseases/complications , Abortion, Spontaneous/etiology , Autoantibodies/blood , Female , Fetal Development , Fetal Diseases/etiology , Graves Disease/complications , Hashimoto Disease/complications , Humans , Hyperthyroidism/complications , Hyperthyroidism/drug therapy , Hypothyroidism/complications , Hypothyroidism/drug therapy , Pregnancy , Pregnancy Complications/physiopathology , Pregnancy Outcome , Prenatal Diagnosis , Thyroid Diseases/immunology , Thyroid Diseases/physiopathology , Thyroid Gland/immunology , Thyroid Gland/physiopathology , Thyrotropin/blood
4.
Best Pract Res Clin Endocrinol Metab ; 23(6): 815-27, 2009 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19942156

ABSTRACT

Inadequate supply of the essential trace element selenium (Se) has been associated with predisposition for, or manifestation of, various human diseases such as Keshan and Kashin-Beck disease, cancer, impaired immune function, neurodegenerative and age-related disorders and disturbances of the thyroid hormone axis. Se deficiency in combination with inadequate iodine contributes to the pathogenesis of myxedematous cretinism. The recent identification of various distinct selenocysteine-containing proteins, encoded by 25 human genes, provides information on the molecular and biochemical basis of beneficial and possible adverse effects of this trace element. The thyroid gland is among the human tissues with the highest Se content per mass unit similar to other endocrine organs and the brain. Selenoproteins involved in cellular antioxidative defence systems and redox control, such as the glutathione peroxidase (GPx) and the thioredoxin reductase (TxnRd) family, are involved in protection of the thyroid gland from excess hydrogen peroxide and reactive oxygen species produced by the follicles for biosynthesis of thyroid hormones. In addition, the three key enzymes involved in activation and inactivation of thyroid hormones, the iodothyronine deiodinases (DIO1,2,3), are selenoproteins with development, cell- and pathology-related expression patterns. While nutritional Se supply is normally sufficient for adequate expression of functional Dio enzymes with exception of long-term parenteral nutrition and certain diseases impairing gastrointestinal absorption of Se compounds, the nutritional Se supply for the protection of the thyroid gland and synthesis of some more abundant selenoproteins of the GPx and the TrxR family might be limiting their proper expression under (patho-)physiological conditions.


Subject(s)
Selenium/physiology , Thyroid Gland/physiology , Clinical Trials as Topic , Humans , Hypothyroidism/drug therapy , Immunity/drug effects , Iodide Peroxidase/biosynthesis , Iodide Peroxidase/metabolism , Selenium/deficiency , Selenium/therapeutic use , Selenoproteins/metabolism , Thyroiditis, Autoimmune/drug therapy , Triiodothyronine/biosynthesis
5.
J Trace Elem Med Biol ; 23(2): 71-4, 2009.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19398053

ABSTRACT

In critical ill states the plasma selenium levels are low and inversely correlated with the severity and outcome of the disease. The plasma selenium levels indicate the amount of circulating selenoproteins and selenoenzymes. These are important for the maintenance of the redox system, modulating the immune system and also for thyroid hormone metabolism. Not only all three deiodinases (D1-3) are selenoenzymes, but within the thyroid gland there are several other selenoenzymes, which are important for the maintenance of normal thyroid function. In critical ill states also triodothyronine (T3) is low and reverse T3 elevated, and also TSH and thyroxin (T4) are low, correlating like low plasma selenium with the severity of the disease. Subsequently, several intervention trials had been performed to evaluate whether an adjuvant selenium supplementation might attenuate the course of the disease and improve outcome. The selenium supplementation improved outcome and even reduced mortality in some but not all prospective randomized trials. A few prospective randomized intervention trials with selenium supplementation had also been performed to evaluate the hypothesis, whether low selenium is the cause of low-T3-syndrome, however, with conflicting results and no clear evidence that low D1 activity is due to the selenium deficiency in critical illness. Because D1 catalyses the conversion of T4 to T3 and also the clearance of reverse T3, low D1 activity would sufficiently explain low plasma T3 and elevated reverse T3. It had been, however, clearly shown that cytokines are responsible for the inhibition of D1 activity, but D2 and D3 are even higher during acute inflammation in critically ill patients. One of the most important effects of selenium on the immune system seems to be the reduction of cytokine release and therefore an indirect connection between low selenium and low D1 activity has to be postulated and not a lower D1 activity due to lower availability of selenium for the D1 expression.


Subject(s)
Critical Illness , Selenium/blood , Thyroid Hormones/metabolism , Animals , Antioxidants/metabolism , Humans , Iodide Peroxidase/metabolism , Selenium/administration & dosage , Selenoproteins/metabolism , Triiodothyronine/metabolism
7.
Crit Care Med ; 35(1): 118-26, 2007 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17095947

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Sepsis is associated with an increase in reactive oxygen species and low endogenous antioxidative capacity. We postulated that high-dose supplementation of sodium-selenite would improve the outcome of patients with severe sepsis and septic shock. DESIGN: Prospective randomized, placebo-controlled, multiple-center trial. SETTING: Eleven intensive care units in Germany. PATIENTS: Patients were 249 patients with severe systemic inflammatory response syndrome, sepsis, and septic shock and an Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE) III score >70. INTERVENTIONS: Patients received 1000 microg of sodium-selenite as a 30-min bolus injection, followed by 14 daily continuous infusions of 1000 microg intravenously, or placebo. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: The primary end point was 28-day mortality; secondary end points were survival time and clinical course of APACHE III and logistic organ dysfunction system scores. In addition, selenium levels in serum, whole blood, and urine as well as serum glutathione-peroxidase-3 activity were measured. From 249 patients included, 11 patients had to be excluded. The intention-to-treat analysis of the remaining 238 patients revealed a mortality rate of 50.0% in the placebo group and 39.7% in the selenium-treated group (p = .109; odds ratio, 0.66; confidence interval, 0.39-1.1). A further 49 patients had to be excluded before the final analysis because of severe violations of the study protocol. In the remaining 92 patients of the study group, the 28-day mortality rate was significantly reduced to 42.4% compared with 56.7% in 97 patients of the placebo group (p = .049, odds ratio, 0.56; confidence interval, 0.32-1.00). In predefined subgroup analyses, the mortality rate was significantly reduced in patients with septic shock with disseminated intravascular coagulation (n = 82, p = .018) as well as in the most critically ill patients with an APACHE III score > or =102 (>75% quartile, n = 54, p = .040) or in patients with more than three organ dysfunctions (n = 83, p = .039). Whole blood selenium concentrations and glutathione peroxidase-3 activity were within the upper normal range during selenium treatment, whereas they remained significantly low in the placebo group. There were no side effects observed due to high-dose sodium-selenite treatment. CONCLUSIONS: The adjuvant treatment of patients with high-dose sodium-selenite reduces mortality rate in patients with severe sepsis or septic shock.


Subject(s)
Sepsis/drug therapy , Shock, Septic/drug therapy , Sodium Selenite/therapeutic use , Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome/drug therapy , APACHE , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation/etiology , Double-Blind Method , Drug Monitoring , Female , Germany/epidemiology , Glutathione Peroxidase/blood , Hospital Mortality , Humans , Infusions, Intravenous , Kaplan-Meier Estimate , Male , Middle Aged , Multiple Organ Failure/etiology , Prospective Studies , Sepsis/complications , Sepsis/metabolism , Sepsis/mortality , Severity of Illness Index , Shock, Septic/complications , Shock, Septic/metabolism , Shock, Septic/mortality , Sodium Selenite/metabolism , Sodium Selenite/pharmacology , Survival Rate , Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome/complications , Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome/metabolism , Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome/mortality , Treatment Outcome
8.
Biofactors ; 19(3-4): 165-70, 2003.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14757967

ABSTRACT

We recently conducted a prospective, placebo-controlled clinical study, where we could demonstrate, that a substitution of 200 microg sodium selenite for three months in patients with autoimmune thyroiditis reduced thyroid peroxidase antibody (TPO-Ab) concentrations significantly. Forty-seven patients from the initially 70 patients agreed to participate in a follow-up cross-over study for further six months. One group (n = 13), which initially received selenium continued to take 200 microg sodium selenite (Se-Se), one group stopped taking selenium (Se-0) ( n = 9), another group which received placebo started to take 200 microg selenium (n = 14) (Plac-Se) and the last group was without selenium substitution (Plac-0) (n = 11). TPO-Ab concentrations were measured at beginning and the end of the study. In the Se-Se group, the TPO-Ab concentrations further significantly p = 0.004) decreased from 625 +/- 470 U/ml to 354 +/- 321 U/ml, in the Se-0 group the TPO-Ab concentrations increased significantly p = 0.017) from 450 +/- 335 to 708 +/- 313 U/ml. In the placebo group, the TPO-Ab concentrations in those patients who were followed without selenium substitution were unchanged (1351 +/- 940 vs. 1724 +/- 1112 U/ml, p = 0.555). In contrast, the patients who received 200 microg sodium selenite after placebo, the TPO-Ab concentrations decreased significantly (p = 0.029) from 1182 +/- 723 to 643 +/- 477 U/ml.


Subject(s)
Antioxidants/therapeutic use , Selenium/therapeutic use , Thyroiditis, Autoimmune/drug therapy , Adult , Autoantibodies/blood , Cross-Over Studies , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Iodide Peroxidase/blood , Iodide Peroxidase/drug effects , Middle Aged , Prospective Studies , Thyroiditis, Autoimmune/blood , Thyroiditis, Autoimmune/immunology
9.
J Clin Endocrinol Metab ; 87(4): 1687-91, 2002 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11932302

ABSTRACT

In areas with severe selenium deficiency there is a higher incidence of thyroiditis due to a decreased activity of selenium-dependent glutathione peroxidase activity within thyroid cells. Selenium-dependent enzymes also have several modifying effects on the immune system. Therefore, even mild selenium deficiency may contribute to the development and maintenance of autoimmune thyroid diseases. We performed a blinded, placebo-controlled, prospective study in female patients (n = 70; mean age, 47.5 +/- 0.7 yr) with autoimmune thyroiditis and thyroid peroxidase antibodies (TPOAb) and/or Tg antibodies (TgAb) above 350 IU/ml. The primary end point of the study was the change in TPOAb concentrations. Secondary end points were changes in TgAb, TSH, and free thyroid hormone levels as well as ultrasound pattern of the thyroid and quality of life estimation. Patients were randomized into 2 age- and antibody (TPOAb)-matched groups; 36 patients received 200 microg (2.53 micromol) sodium selenite/d, orally, for 3 months, and 34 patients received placebo. All patients were substituted with L-T(4) to maintain TSH within the normal range. TPOAb, TgAb, TSH, and free thyroid hormones were determined by commercial assays. The echogenicity of the thyroid was monitored with high resolution ultrasound. The mean TPOAb concentration decreased significantly to 63.6% (P = 0.013) in the selenium group vs. 88% (P = 0.95) in the placebo group. A subgroup analysis of those patients with TPOAb greater than 1200 IU/ml revealed a mean 40% reduction in the selenium-treated patients compared with a 10% increase in TPOAb in the placebo group. TgAb concentrations were lower in the placebo group at the beginning of the study and significantly further decreased (P = 0.018), but were unchanged in the selenium group. Nine patients in the selenium-treated group had completely normalized antibody concentrations, in contrast to two patients in the placebo group (by chi(2) test, P = 0.01). Ultrasound of the thyroid showed normalized echogenicity in these patients. The mean TSH, free T(4), and free T(3) levels were unchanged in both groups. We conclude that selenium substitution may improve the inflammatory activity in patients with autoimmune thyroiditis, especially in those with high activity. Whether this effect is specific for autoimmune thyroiditis or may also be effective in other endocrine autoimmune diseases has yet to be investigated.


Subject(s)
Antibodies/blood , Antioxidants/therapeutic use , Iodide Peroxidase/immunology , Selenium/therapeutic use , Thyroiditis, Autoimmune/drug therapy , Thyroiditis, Autoimmune/immunology , Adult , Autoantibodies/analysis , Chronic Disease , Double-Blind Method , Female , Humans , Middle Aged , Osmolar Concentration , Prospective Studies , Reference Values , Selenium/blood , Thyroglobulin/immunology , Thyroid Gland/diagnostic imaging , Thyroiditis, Autoimmune/diagnostic imaging , Ultrasonography
10.
Transplantation ; 73(4): 547-52, 2002 Feb 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11889427

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Tacrolimus (FK506) is a new immunosuppressive drug in organ transplantation that has demonstrated experimentally to be more deleterious on bone mineral metabolism than cyclosporine. The purpose of this clinical study was to evaluate the effects of a tacrolimus-based immunosuppression on the skeleton and to investigate in a prospective, longitudinal, randomized, double-blind, study the effect of 0.25 microg calcitriol (1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3) versus placebo in the prevention of bone loss and fracture rate after heart transplantion (HTx). METHODS: A total of 53 patients (5 female, 48 male, mean age: 53+/-11 years) were randomized to the study medication. Basic therapy included calcium and sex hormone replacement in hypogonadism. Bone mineral density of the lumbar spine (LS) and femoral neck (FN) were performed at baseline, after 12 and 24 months. Biochemical indexes of mineral metabolism were measured every 3 months. RESULTS: Overall bone mineral density (BMD) was significantly decreased after HTx (T-score-LS: 89+/-13%; FN: 88+/-14%). LS-BMD (% change in g/cm2) increased significantly within the study period in the calcitriol group (12 months: 7.1+/-8.1%, P<0.01; 24 months: 14.0+/-10.1%, P<0.01) and showed a positive trend in the placebo group (12 months: 4.5+/-9.3%, NS; 24 months: 6.2+/-8.0%, NS). FN-BMD in the calcitriol group was stable (12 months: -2.1+/-4.2%; NS; 24 months: -0.9+/-3.2%, NS). FN-BMD in the placebo group decreased significantly within the first 12 month follow-up period (-7.3+/-5.4; P<0.05) and stabilized within 2 years (-8.0+/-4.1%; P < 0.05). Fracture incidence was low during the study interval (first year: 5.0%, second year: 0%). Bone resorption markers decreased significantly during calcitriol therapy. CONCLUSIONS: High dose tacrolimus-based immunosuppressive regimen is associated with a rapid bone loss early after cardiac transplantation. Beyond the first 6 months after HTx, calcium, vitamin D, and hormone supplementation in hypogonadism lead sufficiently to bone mineral recovery. Besides immunosuppression, both concomitant hypogonadism and secondary hyperparathyroidism play a major role for the bone loss and should be therefore monitored and treated adequately. Low dose calcitriol should be substituted for at least 2 years as additional antiresorptive therapy.


Subject(s)
Bone Density/physiology , Bone and Bones/metabolism , Calcitriol/therapeutic use , Heart Transplantation/physiology , Immunosuppressive Agents/therapeutic use , Tacrolimus/therapeutic use , Adult , Bone Density/drug effects , Bone Resorption , Bone and Bones/drug effects , Double-Blind Method , Female , Heart Transplantation/immunology , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Middle Aged , Placebos , Reference Values , Time Factors
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