Serum selenium as well as serum zinc, copper, magnesium, calcium and manganese were investigated in a control group of adult males and in 11 groups of patients in various disease states. Not only the change of each trace element but also the possible association between elements was studied in the various groups. All patients were fasting when sampled and studied only after the acute phase of the disease was corrected. Trace metal determinations were performed by atomic absorption spectrophometry (Mg, Ca, Cu, Zn) and by neutron activation analysis (Se, Mn). All patients showed low serum zinc when compared to controls. Cirrhotic patients had a low serum selenium level as well as low calcium, magnesium and zinc. Emphysemia and cancer patients had an elevated serum copper concentration while copper and manganese levels were elevated in congestive heart failure, infection and pschoses. To our knowledge this is the first time low serum selenium values have been demonstrated to be associated with the low serum zinc, calcium and magnesium levels found in cirrhotic patients.
Since brain mercury concentrations from deceased subjects with either Alzheimer's disease or multiple sclerosis are not significantly higher than controls, the present study provides no scientific support that mercury plays a significant role in the pathogenesis of these neurologic disorders.
A method has been developed for the determination of trimethylselenonium (TMSe) Ion and selenite (Se032™) Ion In urine by anion exchange chromatography, selectively eluting TMSe and Se032'. Since the recoveries are quantitative, a method of additive spikes Is employed to determine TMSe and Se032" Ion concentrations In urine specimens. The TMSe and Se032-chromatographic elutions were collected In vials, Irradiated with neutrons, and radloassayed for 77mSe activity. The limit of detection Is 10 ng of Se as TMSe or Se032"/mL of urine. Thirteen urine specimens from normal subjects were analyzed for TMSe, Se032™, and total selenium concentration.
An inverse relationship exists between dietary selenium (Se) concentrations and the incidence of human breast cancer. The addition of Se to the diet has been shown to decrease the incidence of spontaneous murine mammary tumors. We compared the serum Se concentrations in breast cancer patients with those of women without breast cancer. Serum was collected from 35 women with breast cancer. Nineteen of these women had infiltrating ductal carcinoma and two had Paget disease of the nipple. Nine women had lymph nodal metastases at the time of mastectomy, four had definite evidence of metastatic disease when the blood samples were drawn, and the disease process of one patient was unclassified. Samples from 27 women known to be free of breast cancer were used as controls. The difference noted between the mean serum Se concentrations of breast cancer patients and controls were found to be significant.
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