Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Decreased serum selenium in alcoholics as related to liver structure and function

1985; Elsevier BV; Volume: 42; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1093/ajcn/42.1.147

ISSN

1938-3207

Autores

H Korpela, Jorma Kumpulainen, P. V. Luoma, AJ Arranto, EA Sotaniemi,

Tópico(s)

Liver Disease and Transplantation

Resumo

Serum selenium was evaluated in relation to hepatic structure and function in 46 alcoholics with diagnostic liver biopsy classified into 4 groups by hepatic histology. Their serum selenium concentration varied from 12 to 88 micrograms/l and was lower (p less than 0.001) in all groups of alcoholics, ie patients with normal liver (53.0 +/- 20.7 micrograms/l, mean +/- SD), fatty liver (55.8 +/- 21.2 micrograms/l), alcoholic hepatitis (46.0 +/- 14.1 micrograms/l), and cirrhosis (41.1 +/- 12.8 micrograms/l), than in 25 healthy controls (88.7 +/- 11.0 micrograms/l). Serum selenium level was related to the severity of liver disease, and most reduced in subjects with decompensated alcoholic cirrhosis. Their serum selenium level (29.2 +/- 13.7 micrograms/l) was below (p less than 0.05) that obtained in alcoholics with normal liver and fatty liver respectively. Both inadequate dietary selenium intake and alcohol-induced changes in hepatic structure and function may have contributed to the decrease of serum selenium in the subjects studied.

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