Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

A pilot survey of selenium status and its geospatial variation among children and women in three rural districts of Zimbabwe

Beaula Mutonhodza, Christopher Chagumaira, Mavis Precious Dembedza, Edward J. M. Joy, Muneta G. Manzeke‐Kangara, Handrea Njovo, Tasiana K. Nyadzayo, R. M. Lark, Alexander Kalimbira, Elizabeth H. Bailey, Martin R. Broadley, Tonderayi M. Matsungo, Prosper Chopera

Frontiers in Nutrition · 2023

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Summary

Introduction: Selenium (Se) deficiency is increasingly recognized as a public health problem in sub-Saharan Africa. Methods: = 831) selected by simple random sampling in rural Zimbabwe (Murewa, Shamva, and Mutasa districts). Venous blood samples were collected and stored according to World Health Organization guidelines. Plasma Se concentration was determined by inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry. Results: Median, Q1, and Q3 plasma Se concentrations were 61.2, 48.7, and 73.3 μg/L for women and 40.5, 31.3, and 49.5 μg/L for children, respectively. Low plasma Se concentrations (9.41 μg/L in children and 10.20 μg/L in women) indicative of severe Se deficiency risk was observed. Overall, 94.6% of children and 69.8% of women had sub-optimal Se status defined by plasma Se concentration

Subject
Micronutrients & dietary adequacy
Source type
Peer-reviewed study
System type
Other
DOI
10.3389/fnut.2023.1235113
Catalogue ID
SNmp4zkotn-zcxeni
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