1. Spot urine iodine levels below the WHO recommendation are not related to impaired thyroid function in healthy children and adolescents
- Author
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Michael Thamm, Katalin Dittrich, Jürgen Kratzsch, Mandy Vogel, Wieland Kiess, Antje Kneuer, and Tillmann Wallborn
- Subjects
Male ,Adolescent ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Thyroid Gland ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Physiology ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Thyrotropin ,Urine ,Iodine ,World Health Organization ,Thyroglobulin ,Thyroid peroxidase ,Germany ,medicine ,FT3 ,Humans ,FT4 ,Child ,Children ,Thyroid ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,biology ,business.industry ,TSH ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Original Contribution ,medicine.disease ,Iodine deficiency ,Thyroxine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Child, Preschool ,Cohort ,biology.protein ,Female ,Thyroid function ,business - Abstract
Purpose Iodine deficiency in childhood and adolescence may lead to later thyroid dysfunction, stunted growth and cognitive impairment. The World Health Organization (WHO) has issued recommended age-dependent urine iodine concentration targets, but a critical threshold beyond which clinical sequelae are to be expected remains undefined. Our study aimed to investigate spot urine iodine concentration in a typical Central European cohort of children and adolescents, and consider the implications of these values in regard to laboratory parameters for evaluating thyroid function. Methods Using the Sandell-Kolthoff method, spot urine iodine concentration was measured cross-sectionally from 1802 healthy children and adolescent in the age range of 0.25–18 years within the LIFE-Child epidemiological study based in and around the city of Leipzig (Germany). Additionally, serum thyroid biomarkers of these subjects were measured and correlated to urine iodine levels. Results In our cohort, 61.39% of boys and 65.91% of girls had an iodine level of Conclusion In our cohort of children and adolescents, the relatively high number of iodine levels below the WHO recommendation appears not to be related to clinical or subclinical thyroid diseases in the respective participants.
- Published
- 2020