Nutritional Survey Group c Recommendations
COLLOIDAL
MINERALS
SELENIUM, HEPATITIS B, AND LIVER CANCER
If you scored two or more you may be lacking proper SELENIUM balance
in your body. Medical surveys show that increased selenium intake decreases
the risk of breast, colon, lung and prostate cancer. Selenium also preserves
tissue elasticity; slows down the aging and hardening of tissues through
oxidation; helps in the treatment and prevention of dandruff.
Suggested Products:
Mineral Toddy
Super Daily
SELENIUM LIVER CANCER
SELENIUM IMPORTANCE: SELENIUM
LIVER CANCER
A major antioxidant nutrient, protects cell membranes and prevents free
radical generation thereby decreasing the risk of cancer and disease of
the heart and blood vessels. SELENIUM, HEPATITIS
B, AND LIVER CANCER
Selenium (Se) is an essential trace element that functions as a component
of enzymes involved in antioxidant protection and thyroid hormone metabolism.
In several intra- and extra-cellular glutathioine peroxidases and iodothyronine
5'-deiodinases, selenium is located at the active centers as the selenoamino
acid, selenocysteine (SeCYS). At least two other proteins of unknown function
also contain SeCYS. Although SeCYS is an important dietary form, it is not
directly incorporated into these specific selenium-proteins; instead, a
co-translational process yields tRNA-bound SeCYS. In contrast, selenium
as seleno-methionine is incorporated non-specifically into many proteins,
as it competes with methionine in general protein synthesis. Therefore,
tissues often contain both specific, as well as the nonspecific, selenium-containing
proteins when both SeCYS and selenomethionine are consumed, as found in
many foods. SELENIUM, HEPATITIS B, AND LIVER
CANCER
SELENIUM LIVER CANCER Medical
surveys show that increased selenium intake decreases the risk of breast,
colon, lung and prostate cancer. Selenium also preserves tissue elasticity;
slows down the aging and hardening of tissues through oxidation; helps in
the treatment and prevention of dandruff. SELENIUM LIVER CANCER
DEFICIENCY SYMPTOMS: SELENIUM LIVER
CANCER
May result in premature aging, heart disease, dandruff, loose skin.
SELENIUM LIVER CANCER
Selenium deprivation reduces activities of the selenium-dependent peroxidases
and deiodinases. The signs in animals depend upon vitamin E status and appear
only when both nutrients are limiting. They vary according to species. For
example, selenium- and vitamin E-deficient animals show myopathies of skeletal
(e.g., sheep, cow, horse), cardiac (pig) or smooth (dog, cow) muscle; hepatic
necrosis (rat, pig); increased capillary permeability (chicken); or pancreatic
acinar degeneration (chicken). Characteristic signs of selenium deficiency
have not been described in humans, but very low selenium status is a factor
in the etiologies of a juvenile cardiomyopathy (Keshan Disease) and a chondrodystrophy
(Kaschin-Beck Disease) that occur in selenium-deficient regions of China.SELENIUM LIVER CANCER
Toxicity: Selenium toxicity is characterized by dermatologic lesions;
selenotic animals and humans develop brittle hair and nails/hooves. Sporadic
cases of selenium-poisoning have been reported involving industrial or accidental
exposures to selenium-compounds. In certain rural Chinese communities chronic
intakes of very high amounts (several milligrams per day) of selenium were
linked to skin, hair and nail abnormalities which disappeared upon resuming
regular selenium intakes. Selenium has been identified as the cause of birth
deformities in migratory wildfowl in a wetland area (Kesteron Reservoir,
CA) which receives selenium-enriched irrigation wastewater. This case involved
the biological amplification of selenium by aquatic plants which were important
in the diets of affected animals.SELENIUM
LIVER CANCER
Diet recommendations:SELENIUM
LIVER CANCER
The Recommended Dietary Allowances are: 0-0.5 years, 10 µg; 0.5-1.0 years,
15 µg; 1-6 years, 20 µg; 7-10 years, 30 µg; males, 11-14 years, 40 µg; females,
11-14 years, 45 µg; males and females 15-18 years, 50 µg; adult males 70
µg; adult females, 55 µg; pregnant females, 65 µg; and lactating females,
75 µg. SELENIUM LIVER CANCER
Burk, R.F., ed. (1994) Selenium in Biology and Human Health. Springer-Verlag,
New York, NY
Combs, G.F., Jr. (1994) Essentiality and toxicity of selenium: a critique
of the Recommended Dietary Allowances and the Reference Dose. In: Risk Assessment
of Essential Elements (Mertz, C., Abernathy, C. & Olin, S.S., eds.), pp.
167-183. International Life Sciences Institute Press, Washington, DC.