Lecture 33 - Vitamins & Trace Elements
Lecture 33 - Vitamins & Trace Elements
Lecture 33 - Vitamins & Trace Elements
Elements
Abayomi O. Akanji
Professor of Clinical Pathology
Faculty of Medicine
Kuwait University
What are Trace Elements?
Essential when:
– deficient intake ►impairment of function
– restoration with physiological amounts of only
that element prevents/alleviates impairment.
Classification of Trace Elements
Defined biochemical functions + signs of deficiency
in humans
Fe, Zn, Cu, Co, I, Mo, Se, fluoride
Signs of deficiency; no clear biochemical functions
chromium, boron
Clear biochem function; no clear deficiency signs
manganese
No clear biochemical functions/ deficiency signs
Ni, Si, Va, arsenic, Br, Pb, tin, Li
Trace Element Functions
amplification- small amounts produce dramatic effects on
the body e.g. Fe deficiency & anaemia
Laboratory Assessment:
Zinc deficiency
• Associated with:
- pregnancy: from increased fetal demands
- Nutritional: low zinc diet with high fibre content
- chronic alcoholism: increased urinary zinc excretion
- GIT disease; malabsorption; prolonged parenteral nutrition
Balance :
• poorly absorbed in upper small intestine - only 0.3-2.0% of
dietary intake.
• Significant occupational exposure from steelmaking,
electroplating leather tanning and photographic industries
Disorders of Chromium Metabolism
Laboratory Assessment :
serum chromium: 0.12-2.10 µg/L
urine chromium: 100 - 200 ng/day
Others : hair 0.1-4.1 µg/g
RBC 20-36 µg/L
Chromium deficiency :
Causes : - GIT disease and malabsorption
- prolonged parenteral nutrition
Features : insulin resistance;
Reversed by Cr supplementation.
Chromium toxicity :
usually iatrogenic from occupational exposure
►allergy, conjunctivitis, dermatitis, GIT symptoms, hepatitis.
Selenium
• present in enzymes: glutathione peroxidase, thyroxine deiodinase
• important as an anti-oxidant and in thyroid hormone metabolism
• present mainly in meats, dairy, cereals and grains
• in tissue, present as selenocysteine and selenomethionine
Laboratory Assessment :
• serum selenium: 46-143 µg/L; urine selenium: 7.0-160 µg/L
• Others: hair 0.2-1.4 µg/g; RBC 75-240 µg/L
• Assay of RBC glutathione peroxidase activity
Selenium deficiency :
Causes : - GIT cancer, pregnancy, protein-calorie malnutrition
- prolonged parenteral nutrition
Associated with : Keshan disease - an endemic cardiomyopathy in China
Kashin-Beck disease : endemic osteoarthritis in China
Selenium toxicity:
• associated with loss of hair and nails, skin lesions, CNS abnormalities.
Fluoride
• unique action in preventing tooth decay
• inorganic fluoride readily absorbed in small intestine and
distributed almost entirely in bones and teeth.
• tightly regulated by renal excretion
• significant dietary contribution from drinking water
• other sources: seafood, tea, cow milk, cereals
• excessive intake : mottled teeth, skeletal changes,
ligament calcification
Laboratory Assessment :
concentrations : serum: 10-200 µg/L;
urine : 0.2-3.2 mg/L;
RBC: 450 µg/L
•Manganese
– constituent of many metalloenzymes –
• arginase, pyruvate carboxylase, superoxide dismutase
– activator for enzymes:
• hydrolases, kinases, decarboxylases
– associated with formation of connective & bony tissue, reproduction
& growth functions, CHO & lipid metabolism
– widely distributed in tissues
• highest concns in bone, liver, pancreas
– poorly absorbed from small intestine
– homeostasis maintained primarily through biliary excretion
Significance
- proven role in manganese-dependent enzymes
- No direct evidence of human manganese deficiency.