Etiologic factors and pathologic alterations in selenium-vitamin E deficiency and excess in animals and humans
- 1 April 1992
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Springer Nature in Biological Trace Element Research
- Vol. 33 (1-3) , 1-21
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf02783988
Abstract
The etiology of selenium-vitamin E (Se-E) deficiency diseases may be complex. Many of the syndromes involve combined deficiency of selenium and vitamin E. Selenium moves into the animal and human food chain from soil and plants, which may contain inadequate amounts of the nutrient in many areas of the world. Vitamin E may be in low concentration in many animal feeds unless supplements are added. Some syndromes, such as steatitis in cats, result from an increased requirement of vitamin E in diets that contain large amounts of polyunsaturated fatty acids, and these diseases will only respond to vitamin E administration. Deficiency syndromes in animals owing to pure Se deficiency are infrequent and have been produced mainly by laboratory studies utilizing extreme deficiency conditions. Other factors that may affect the occurrence of these deficiency diseases are concurrent dietary deficiency of S-containing amino acids, bioavailability of different forms of dietary Se, intake of compounds that antagonize Se (e.g., silver salts), and exposure to various prooxidant substances (e.g., iron compounds, oxygen, ozone, and various drugs). A wide variety of pathologic alterations occur in animals and humans with Se-E deficiency. Myocardial lesions are seen most frequently in calves, lambs, pigs, turkey poults, and ducklings. In humans, Keshan disease, an endemic cardiomyopathy in China, is attributed to Se deficiency. Necrosis of skeletal muscle is the most frequent lesion observed in animal species. Necrosis of smooth muscle of the gizzard and intestine may be a prominent lesion in turkey poults, ducklings, and quail. Other Se-E deficiency lesions include hepatic necrosis, gastric ulceration, intestinal and uterine lipofuscinosis, pancreatic damage, steatitis, exudative diathesis, encephalomalacia, and testicular necrosis. Selenium toxicosis is well characterized in animals and humans by neurological, hoof, and hair alterations.Keywords
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