Long-term supplementation with selenate and selenomethionine: urinary excretion by New Zealand women

  • Robinson M
  • Thomson C
  • Jenkinson C
  • et al.
32Citations
Citations of this article
21Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Thirty-six New Zealand women aged between 18 and 23 years received daily for 32 weeks, 200 µg Se as Se-enriched yeast (selenomethionine, SeMet), or brewer's yeast mixed with selenate, or no added Se (placebo) in a double-blind trial. Mean daily Se excretion increased with both supplements; the selenate group excreted more than the SeMet group, 123 v . 66 µg/d respectively at week 2, equivalent to 57 v . 27 % of the dose. Thereafter Se output increased for the SeMet group reaching a plateau at about 100 µg/d at week 16, when plasma Se had also plateaued at 190 ng/ml. The selenate group had reached an earlier plateau of 110 ng Se/ml at week 7. There was a close relationship between 24 h urine and plasma Se for the SeMet group but not for the selenate group. Renal plasma clearances showed two distinctly different responses; the clearance of 0·4 ml/min reached by the SeMet group at week 2 plateaued as plasma Se increased almost 2-fold; whereas for the selenate group the clearance varied between 0·8 and 1·1 ml/min whilst plasma Se remained almost constant at 110 ng/ml. Previous studies, also of 200 µgSe/d as Se-rich bread, in New Zealand (NZ) and elsewhere showed similar responses to Se-yeast; the selenite response was intermediate between selenate and Se-yeast (SeMet). The full significance of these studies awaits identification of Se components in plasma, glomerular filtrate and urine; meanwhile renal clearances serve as a pointer to changes in the distribution of Se-containing fractions in the plasma. Trimethylselenonium was detected in basal urines, and was a minor component in urines of supplemented NZ subjects at about 1 % of the total Se.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Robinson, M. F., Thomson, C. D., Jenkinson, C. P., Luzhen, G., & Whanger, P. D. (1997). Long-term supplementation with selenate and selenomethionine: urinary excretion by New Zealand women. British Journal of Nutrition, 77(4), 551–563. https://doi.org/10.1079/bjn19970056

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free