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Effect of double-blind crossover selenium supplementation on biological indices of selenium status in cystic fibrosis patients
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1993
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NutritionNutrient BioavailabilitySelenium DeficiencyCystic Fibrosis PatientsPhysiologyClinical NutritionSelenium SupplementationSelenium StatusToxicologyBiological IndicesMetabolismMedicineOxidative StressHealth Sciences
Twenty-seven cystic fibrosis patients received selenium supplementation (2.8 micrograms of sodium selenite per kilogram of body weight per day) or a placebo. This 5-month trial was conducted as a double-blind, placebo-controlled study. After an interval of 2 months, treatments of the two groups were interchanged (crossed over) for another 5-month period. A group of healthy subjects, living in the same area, was investigated simultaneously. No selenium deficiency was found either in plasma or in erythrocytes before the supplementation. This result was inconsistent with a previous study performed in 1988 in our laboratory. This change in selenium status can be explained by progress in the nutritional nursing care of children and by the addition of selenium to the diet. During the study, selenium concentrations in plasma decreased when patients received placebo treatment and increased during selenium intake. In one of the two groups a similar variation was found for glutathione peroxidase activities in plasma and erythrocytes, whereas erythrocyte selenium was normal and did not change in any group. Nowadays, in the Grenoble area, the selenium status of cystic fibrosis patients is close to normal. Nevertheless, this study indicates a fragile equilibrium, given that selenium concentrations cn be lowered by placebo or mildly increased by supplementation.