Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/mineral-deficiencies

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Selenium deficiency


FieldValue
nameSelenium deficiency
imageSe-TableImage.svg
captionSelenium
causescompromised intestinal function

Selenium deficiency occurs when an organism lacks the required levels of selenium, a critical nutrient in many species. Deficiency, although relatively rare in healthy well-nourished individuals, can have significant negative results, affecting the health of the heart and the nervous system; contributing to depression, anxiety, and dementia; and interfering with reproduction and gestation.

Signs and symptoms

Selenium deficiency in combination with Coxsackievirus infection can lead to Keshan disease, which is potentially fatal. Selenium deficiency also contributes (along with iodine deficiency) to Kashin-Beck disease. The primary symptom of Keshan disease is myocardial necrosis, leading to the weakening of the heart. Kashin-Beck disease results in atrophy, degeneration, and necrosis of cartilage tissue. Keshan disease also makes the body more susceptible to illness caused by other nutritional, biochemical, or infectious diseases.

Selenium is also necessary for the conversion of the thyroid hormone thyroxine (T4) into its more active counterpart triiodothyronine (T3), and as such a deficiency can cause symptoms of hypothyroidism, including extreme fatigue, mental slowing, goiter, cretinism, and recurrent miscarriage.

Causes

It can occur in patients with severely compromised intestinal function, those undergoing total parenteral nutrition, those who have had gastrointestinal bypass surgery, and also in persons of advanced age (i.e., over 90).

People dependent on food grown from selenium-deficient soil may be at risk for deficiency. Increased risk for developing various diseases has also been noted, even when certain individuals lack optimal amounts of selenium, but not enough to be classified as deficient.

For some time now, it has been reported in the medical literature that a pattern of side effects possibly associated with cholesterol-lowering drugs (e.g., statins) may resemble the pathology of selenium deficiency.

Diagnosis

Reference ranges

The European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) recommends a dietary allowance of 70 μg per day selenium intake for adults. In the US, the Dietary Reference Intake for adults is 55 μg/day. In the UK it is 75 μg/day for adult males and 60 μg/day for adult females. The 55 μg/day recommendation is based on the full expression of plasma glutathione peroxidase. Selenoprotein P is a better indicator of selenium nutritional status, and full expression of it would require more than 66 μg/day.

Epidemiology and prevention

Selenium deficiency is uncommon, but regions in China, Europe, Russia, and New Zealand have low selenium levels in croplands and diet. The worldwide prevalence of selenium deficiency is however predicted to rise under climate change due to the loss of selenium from croplands. These diseases are most common in certain parts of China where the intake is low because the soil is extremely deficient in selenium. Studies in Jiangsu Province of China have indicated a reduction in the prevalence of these diseases by taking selenium supplements. In Finland, selenium salts are added to chemical fertilizers, as a way to increase selenium in soils. Dietary supplements may utilize sodium selenite, L-selenomethionine, or selenium-enriched yeast.

In animals

In some regions (e.g. much of the northeastern and northwestern US and adjacent Canada, and the southeastern US), selenium deficiency in some animal species is common unless supplementation is carried out. Selenium deficiency is responsible (either alone or together with vitamin E deficiency) for many of the cases of WMD ("white muscle disease"), evidenced at slaughter or during necropsy by the whitish appearance of striated muscle tissue due to bleaching by peroxides and hydroperoxides. Although this degenerative disease can occur in foals, pigs, and other animal species, ruminants are particularly susceptible. In general, absorption of dietary selenium is lower in ruminants than in non-ruminants and lower from forages than from grain. Sheep are more susceptible than cattle to WMD, and goats are more susceptible than sheep. The cyanogenic glycosides in some white clover (Trifolium repens) varieties may influence the Se requirement, and inactivation of glutathione peroxidases by the effect of absorbed cyanide on the glutathione moiety.

In areas where selenium deficiency in livestock is a concern, selenium (as selenite) may be supplemented in feed. Certain countries, e.g., the US and Canada, regulate such supplementation. Neonate ruminants at risk of WMD may be administered both Se and vitamin E by injection; some of the WMD myopathies respond only to Se, some only to vitamin E, and some to either.

References

References

  1. (2012). "Dietary selenium and selenoprotein function". Medical Science Monitor.
  2. (3 April 2019). "Selenium–Fascinating Microelement, Properties and Sources in Food". Molecules.
  3. (September 2003). "Toxicological Profile for Selenium". U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
  4. (1998). "Kashin–Beck Osteoarthropathy in Rural Tibet in Relation to Selenium and Iodine Status". New England Journal of Medicine.
  5. "Selenium".
  6. (2000). "Effect of micronutrient status on natural killer cell immune function in healthy free-living subjects aged ≥90 y". American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
  7. (2004). "Selenoprotein synthesis and side-effects of statins". Lancet.
  8. (2004). "Selenoproteins, cholesterol-lowering drugs, and the consequences: Revisiting of the mevalonate pathway". Trends in Cardiovascular Medicine.
  9. (2021-09-01). "Selenium stimulates the antitumour immunity: Insights to future research". European Journal of Cancer.
  10. (2007). "From Selenium to Selenoproteins: Synthesis, Identity, and Their Role in Human Health". Antioxidants & Redox Signaling.
  11. (1 April 2005). "Effectiveness of selenium supplements in a low-selenium area of China". The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
  12. (May 2020). "Selenium Deficiency".
  13. (1 August 1988). "Selenium intake and serum selenium in Finland: effects of soil fertilization with selenium". The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
  14. (1985). "Nutrient Requirements of Sheep". National Academies Press.
  15. (1988). "Jensen and Swift's Diseases of Sheep". Lea & Febiger.
  16. (1999). "The Mineral Nutrition of Livestock". CABI.
  17. Committee on the Nutrient Requirements of Small Ruminants. (2007). "Nutrient Requirements of Small Ruminants: Sheep, Goats, Cervids, and New World Camelids". National Academies Press.
  18. (1972). "Factors influencing selenium and white muscle disease: forage types, salts, amino acids, and dimethyl sulfoxide". Nutr. Rep. Int.
  19. (September 1980). "Oxidized forms of ovine erythrocyte glutathione peroxidase cyanide inhibition of a 4-glutathione:4-selenoenzyme". Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Enzymology.
  20. (2005). "The Merck Veterinary Manual". Wiley.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Selenium deficiency — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report