| Literature DB >> 26950151 |
Crystal D Karakochuk1,2, Kristina D Michaux3, Tze L Chai4, Benny B Chan5, Kyly C Whitfield6,7, Susan I Barr8, Judy McLean9, Aminuzzaman Talukder10, Kroeun Hou11, Sokhoing Ly12, Tim J Green13,14,15.
Abstract
Iodine deficiency disorders are estimated to affect over 1.9 million people worldwide. Iodine deficiency is especially serious for women during pregnancy and lactation because of the negative consequences for both mother and infant. The aim of this cross-sectional study was to determine the median urinary iodine concentration (UIC) as a population-level indicator of iodine status among rural women farmers of reproductive age (18-45 years) in the province of Prey Veng, Cambodia. A total of 450 women provided a spot morning urine sample in 2012. Of those women, 93% (n = 420) were non-pregnant and 7% (n = 30) were pregnant at the time of collection. UIC was quantified using the Sandell-Kolthoff reaction with modifications. The median UIC of non-pregnant (139 μg/L) and pregnant women (157 μg/L) were indicative of adequate iodine status using the WHO/UNICEF/ICCIDD epidemiological criteria for both groups (median UIC between 100-199 and 150-249 μg/L, respectively). We conclude that non-pregnant and pregnant women in rural Prey Veng, Cambodia had adequate iodine status based on single spot morning urine samples collected in 2012. More research is warranted to investigate iodine status among larger and more representative populations of women in Cambodia, especially in light of recent policy changes to the national program for universal salt iodization.Entities:
Keywords: Cambodia; deficiency; iodine; urine; women
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26950151 PMCID: PMC4808868 DOI: 10.3390/nu8030139
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1The study area of the province of Prey Veng in Cambodia.
Urinary iodine concentrations (μg/L) and distribution frequencies of women (18–45 years) in Prey Veng, Cambodia for non-pregnant and pregnant women 1.
| Non-Pregnant | Pregnant | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Number, | 419 (93.3) | Number, | 30 (6.7) |
| Median, μg/L | 139 2 | Median, μg/L | 157 2 |
| Range (min, max), μg/L | 992 (0, 992) | Range (min, max), μg/L | 326 (49, 375) |
| UIC distribution frequency 3 | UIC distribution frequency 3 | ||
| <20 μg/L | 1.2% | <20 μg/L | 0% |
| <50 μg/L | 6.4% | <50 μg/L | 3.3% |
| <100 μg/L | 28.4% | <150 μg/L | 36.7% |
| 100–199 μg/L | 47.7% 4 | 150–249 μg/L | 46.7% 4 |
| 200–299 μg/L | 17.2% | 250–499 μg/L | 16.7% |
| ≥300 μg/L | 6.7% | ≥500 μg/L | 0% |
1 Total n = 449 (n = 1 sample was missing at the time of analysis). UIC: urinary iodine concentration; 2 Median UIC are indicative of adequate iodine status for both non-pregnant women (100–199 μg/L) and pregnant women (150–249 μg/L) [11]; 3 distribution frequency (%) is the number of women below or above the cut-offs, or within the range, divided by the total number of women and multiplied by 100; 4 proportion of women with individual UIC within the range suggestive of adequate iodine status [11].