| Literature DB >> 31428331 |
Yoshitaka Nakamura1, Michiko Fukushima2, Seiko Hoshi3, Amares Chatt4, Takashi Sakata2.
Abstract
To evaluate the daily Se intake of 3- to 5-year-old Japanese children, we used seventy-two urine samples collected from fifty-three children (twenty-seven male and twenty-six female) from two cities in Miyagi prefecture, Japan. For measuring low Se concentrations with high precision, accuracy and rapidity in the 24-h urine samples, we developed an instrumental neutron activation analysis (INAA) method, that is without any chemical separation, using the short-lived 77mSe (t 1/2 = 17·4 s) nuclide. The estimated Se intake of the fifty-three children was 51·5 (sd 30·2) µg/d (geometric mean: 42·7 µg/d). Ten subjects (three male and seven female), successfully provided 24-h urine samples over two or three consecutive days; their Se intake was 37·4 (sd 5·9) µg/d. Based on the logarithmically transformed data of these ten subjects, the ratio of intra-/inter-individual variances of usual Se intake was 16·7 (28·0/1·7) and geometric mean was 27·7 µg/d. The 5th to 95th percentile of usual Se intake of these ten subjects was 17·5 to 40·4 µg/d, which ranged between the recommended dietary allowance and tolerable upper intake level of Se by the Dietary Reference Intakes for Japanese (2015).Entities:
Keywords: AAS, atomic absorption spectrometry; Early childhood; ICP, inductively coupled plasma; INAA, instrumental neutron activation analysis; Micronutrients; NAA, neutron activation analysis; NIST, United States National Institute of Standards and Technology; PC-INAA, pseudo-cyclic instrumental neutron activation analysis; SRM, standard reference material; Selenium intake; Urine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31428331 PMCID: PMC6683239 DOI: 10.1017/jns.2019.21
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nutr Sci ISSN: 2048-6790
Fig. 1.γ-Ray spectra of United States National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Toxic Elements in Urine (SRM-2678) by pseudo-cyclic instrumental neutron activation analysis (PC-INAA).
Fig. 2.Histogram for distribution of 24-h urinary selenium excretion (n 53).
Urinary selenium concentration, urinary selenium excretion and estimated selenium intake in healthy 3- to 5-year-old children who succeeded in providing complete 24-h urine in Miyagi prefecture, Japan†
(Mean values and standard deviations; geometric means)
| Age (months) | Body weight (kg) | Volume of 24-h urine | Se concentration in 24-h urine (μg/l) | Se excretion in 24-h urine (μg/d) | Se excretion in 24-h urine (μg/kg body weight/d) | Estimated daily Se intake | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Subjects ( | Mean | Mean | Mean | Mean | Mean | Geometric mean | Mean | Geometric mean | Mean | Geometric mean | ||||||||
| All subjects | 53 | 51·9 | 8·9 | 17·5 | 2·9 | 515·3 | 167·8 | 79·4 | 47·8 | 38·5 | 22·5 | 32·0 | 2·2 | 1·3 | 1·9 | 51·5 | 30·2 | 42·7 |
| Sex | ||||||||||||||||||
| Male | 27 | 51·7 | 8·4 | 17·1 | 1·8 | 535·3 | 186·2 | 82·5 | 49·0 | 41·2 | 22·9 | 34·9 | 2·4 | 1·5 | 2·1 | 56·5 | 31·4 | 47·9 |
| Female | 26 | 52·1 | 9·5 | 17·9 | 3·7 | 494·6 | 147·1 | 76·0 | 47·2 | 35·7 | 22·1 | 29·2 | 1·9 | 1·0 | 1·6 | 46·3 | 28·7 | 37·9 |
| Location | ||||||||||||||||||
| T city | 37 | 53·3 | 8·9 | 17·8 | 2·9 | 534·9 | 184·1 | 80·9 | 46·8 | 40·2 | 22·9 | 34·2 | 2·3 | 1·3 | 1·9 | 54·0 | 31·0 | 45·9 |
| H city | 16 | 48·8 | 8·4 | 16·4 | 2·6 | 470·0 | 114·7 | 75·8 | 51·3 | 34·7 | 21·6 | 27·4 | 2·1 | 1·1 | 1·6 | 45·8 | 28·4 | 36·2 |
| Age (months) | ||||||||||||||||||
| 36–53 | 35 | 46·7 | 4·5 | 16·3 | 1·9 | 509·1 | 176·8 | 72·9 | 40·4 | 35·4 | 21·4 | 29·2 | 2·2 | 1·4 | 1·8 | 47·5 | 29·5 | 38·9 |
| 54–71 | 18 | 62·1 | 5·8 | 19·9* | 3·1 | 527·5 | 152·8 | 92·0 | 58·9 | 44·5 | 23·8 | 38·2 | 2·2 | 1·1 | 1·9 | 59·2* | 30·9 | 51·0 |
H, Higashi-Matsushima; T, Tome.
Statistically significant with ANOVA (P < 0·05, v. 36–53 months).
All one-way effects and two-way interaction effects were statistically not significant except for age effect on body weight, daily urinary Se excretion and Se intake.
Values in our previous report(.
(Urinary Se excretion)/(0·73 (male) or 0·77 (female)).
Fig. 3.Estimated selenium intake levels in (a) male (n 27) and (b) female (n 26) children of 3–5 years of age in Higashi-Matsushima and Tome cities, Miyagi prefecture, Japan. Solid and broken horizontal lines show the recommended dietary allowance and tolerable upper intake level of selenium from the Dietary Reference Intakes for Japanese (2015)(, respectively.
Distribution of usual urinary excretions of selenium and usual selenium intake in ten subjects
| Percentile | Usual urinary excretions of Se | Estimated usual Se intake (μg/d) | Usual Se intake |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5th | 13·1 | 26·6 | 17·5 |
| 10th | 13·1 | 27·4 | 18·2 |
| 25th | 18·5 | 34·8 | 25·6 |
| 50th | 19·5 | 36·4 | 27·1 |
| 75th | 24·2 | 40·1 | 31·2 |
| 90th | 30·1 | 48·6 | 39·4 |
| 95th | 30·9 | 49·6 | 40·4 |
| Mean | – | 37·4 | – |
| – | 5·9 | – | |
| Geometric mean | 21·2 | – | 27·7 |
| Ratio of intra- individual:inter individual variances | 14·5 (23·2/1·6) | 19·1 (1·54/0·08) | 16·7 (28·0/1·7) |
Estimated from logarithmically transformed data.