Selenium in pregnancy: is selenium an active defective ion against environmental chemical stress?

Environmental research, 96(1), 51-61

DOI 10.1016/j.envres.2004.03.003 PMID 15261784 Source

Abstract

Transportation of selenium from mother to fetus and its possible effects on mother's zinc, copper, cadmium, and mercury levels were studied together during the first trimester and at term in 216 mothers. Mothers came from three geographical places with different selenium intakes. The role of selenium as a biomarker for the vital function was estimated by studying the associations between tissue or blood selenium content and placental cytochrome P450 enzyme activities and the newborn's birth weight. Regardless of the selenium intake of the mothers, higher concentrations were found in the cord blood than in mother's blood reflecting active transportation of selenium to the fetus. Active smoking was associated with higher placental selenium concentrations like it is associated with higher placental zinc concentrations. When the cadmium concentrations were high in placenta, as in smokers, the transfer of selenium from blood to placenta was increased, decreasing the selenium levels in blood. On the other hand, the high selenium concentrations in blood were connected to lower cadmium concentrations in placenta also in nonsmokers. Selenium had correlations with copper and zinc. ECOD activity in placental tissue, mercury in mothers' hair, mothers' age, and selenium concentrations in cord blood and placental selenium all seem to have connections with xenobiotic-metabolizing enzymes linked effects among mothers. These data suggest that selenium has an active role in the mother's defense systems against the toxicity of environmental pollutants and the constituents of cigarette smoke.

Topics

selenium pregnancy outcomes, trace elements maternal health, selenium deficiency pregnancy, environmental exposures pregnancy, selenium supplementation prenatal, maternal selenium status birth weight, preeclampsia selenium levels, pregnancy lethargy headache symptoms, first trimester selenium, placental selenium transfer

Cite this article

Kantola, M., Purkunen, R., Kröger, P., Tooming, A., Juravskaja, J., Pasanen, M., Seppänen, K., Saarikoski, S., & Vartiainen, T. (2004). Selenium in pregnancy: is selenium an active defective ion against environmental chemical stress?. *Environmental research*, *96*(1), 51-61. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envres.2004.03.003

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