Chrome Extension
WeChat Mini Program
Use on ChatGLM

The Consumption of Food-Based Iodine in the Immediate Pre-Pregnancy Period in Madrid Is Insufficient. San Carlos and Pregnancy Cohort Study

Nutrients(2021)

Cited 2|Views18
No score
Abstract
A pre-gestational thyroid reserve of iodine is crucial to guarantee the increased demand for thyroid hormone production of early pregnancy. An iodine intake >= 150 mu g/day is currently recommended. The objective of this study was to assess average pre-gestational food-based iodine consumption in pregnant women at their first prenatal visit (<12 gestational weeks), and its association with adverse materno-fetal events (history of miscarriages, early fetal losses, Gestational Diabetes, prematurity, caesarean sections, and new-borns large/small for gestational age). Between 2015-2017, 2523 normoglycemic women out of 3026 eligible had data in the modified Diabetes Nutrition and Complication Trial (DNCT) questionnaire permitting assessment of pre-gestational food-based iodine consumption, and were included in this study. Daily food-based iodine intake was 123 +/- 48 mu g, with 1922 (76.1%) not reaching 150 mu g/day. Attaining this amount was associated with consuming 8 weekly servings of vegetables (3.84; 3.16-4.65), 1 of shellfish (8.72; 6.96-10.93) and/or 2 daily dairy products (6.43; 5.27-7.86). Women who reached a pre-gestational intake >= 150 mu g had lower rates of hypothyroxinemia (104 (17.3%)/384 (21.4%); p = 0.026), a lower miscarriage rate, and a decrease in the composite of materno-fetal adverse events (0.81; 0.67-0.98). Reaching the recommended iodine pre-pregnancy intake with foods could benefit the progression of pregnancy.
More
Translated text
Key words
based-food iodine intake,materno-fetal outcomes,food patterns,dairy products,shellfish
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined