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How Minute Quantities Of Selenium May Have A Massive Impact On Your Health
Selenium is one of those micro-nutrients which although required by the body in only tiny quantities are nevertheless vitally important for the health and well-being of the human organism.
There’s now compelling evidence of selenium’s significance as an anti-oxidant, in fighting cancer and heart disease, and as a stimulant for the immune system.
Selenium’s importance as an
anti-oxidant lies principally in its necessity for the production
of the key anti-oxidant enzyme, glutathione, which forms one of
the body’s first lines of defence against dangerous
superoxide free radicals. The body particularly needs the
fat-soluble glutathione to work with vitamin E to soak up and
neutralise any free radicals attacking the delicate yet vital
fatty structures of cells such as the membranes.
In this way selenium and vitamin E
appear to work so closely together that a deficiency in one may
be compensated for by the other, and selenium is also crucial as
part of the enzyme thioredoxin reductase which is important in
maintaining the anti-oxidant properties of vitamin C. Moreover,
vitamin E cannot itself do its work in the absence of an adequate
supply of active vitamin C; and vitamin C cannot remain
active without the presence of glutathione.
Selenium therefore forms part of a
complex web of interacting nutrients, each of which is essential
to a successful anti-oxidant rich diet, and whilst the amounts of
selenium required by the body may be tiny, the Recommended
Dietary Allowance (RDA) being set at just 55 micrograms per day, the effects of any deficiency can be nevertheless
disastrous.
It has to be said that a microgram
(mcg) is a very small quantity indeed – a mere one
thousandth of a milligram, so it might seem highly unlikely that
anyone in an affluent Western society could allow himself to be
deficient. And indeed, a little attention to the daily diet
should ensure that this is the case.
The richest food source of selenium,
by far, is brazil nuts, and amazingly a single nut may provide as
much as 100 mcg. A mere one ounce serving of nuts may yield
more than 800 mcg, more than double the Food and Nutrition
Board’s recommended upper safe limit of 400 mcg. But
luckily both organ meats and seafoods such as shrimps, crabmeat,
salmon or halibut may provide selenium in much more manageable
amounts of up to 40 mcg in a 3 oz serving. Muscle meats are
also a reasonably good source, although pork, the best of these,
will only provide around 33 mcg per 3 oz.
Whole grains such as brown rice or
wholemeal bread may provide 15-20 mcg per serving, but fruits and
vegetables are not particularly useful sources because of the way
in which modern intensive farming procedures continue to strip
soils of their mineral content.
Nevertheless, most healthy
individuals seem to have little difficulty in achieving the RDA.
But mere freedom from deficiency disease is not at all the same
thing as optimal health. So the question must be: is there
likely to be any benefit in supplementing above the 100 mcg
level, but below the 400 mcg upper limit?
The answer appears to be a resounding
yes. In addition to ensuring the maximum possible supply of
vital anti-oxidant enzymes, research strongly suggests that
supplementation at the level of 200 mcg per day may act as a
stimulant to the immune system and may also help in the fight
against cancer, particularly that of the prostate.
Research published in the Journal of
the American Medical Association in 1996, although insisting that
further studies are needed, suggested that selenium supplements
at a level of 200 mcg a day may have a striking effect in
reducing certain common types of cancer, including those of the
prostate by 63%, oesophagus by 67%, colorectal by 58% and lung by
46%.
Another study of 33,000 men over 5 years
demonstrated a 2/3rds reduction in the risk of prostate cancer
for men taking 200 mcg a day (Journal of National Cancer
Institute 1998), whilst a further study of 9,000
Japanese/American men found a 50% reduction in the risk of
developing prostate cancer for those in the highest quartile of
selenium intake compared with those in the lowest quartile.
A useful working hypothesis may be
that as cancer is principally a disease of degeneration, it is
the acknowledged anti-oxidant effect of selenium that is
responsible for its apparent effectiveness in this area.
As always, however, the medical
establishment is cautious, and reluctant to confirm the potential
benefits of nutrition as opposed to more invasive, conventional
therapies. But the indications for selenium in relation to
prostate cancer, in particular, are so promising that a number of
large trials against placebo control are currently in progress.
Steve Smith
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