Importance of Iodine | Electrolytes
Iodine - Getting It Right by Dr. Lynne August
A woman in her mid-forties called me in a panic. She was suddenly
having hot flashes. She had never had hot flashes before nor had
she had any other menopausal symptoms. In fact, she is still menstruating
regularly. However, she was experiencing other symptoms --heart
racing, weight loss, agitation, sleeplessness, increased body temperature--
all pointing to hyperthyroidism, i.e., too much thyroid hormone.
Since her thyroid tests and physical examination were both normal,
her doctor wanted her to take estrogen for the hot flashes.
I recommended she do a simple test for iodine deficiency. This
consists of "painting" a patch of Tincture of Iodine on the skin
over the biceps. In her case the color of the Tincture of Iodine
completely disappeared in less than two hours. This indicates a
severe iodine deficiency. If there is no iodine deficiency the full
color of the tincture will last at least 6 hours. I then recommended
she take a tablet of protein-bound iodine per day. Within six days
her hot flashes markedly decreased.
This case highlights several paradoxes of iodine deficiency.
A goiter often signals iodine deficiency. A goiter is an enlargement
of the thyroid resulting from the thyroid gland's attempt to concentrate
iodine in itself. This woman had no thyroid enlargement.
Iodine deficiency is most commonly known to cause hypothyroidism,
i.e., too little thyroid hormone. Hypothyroidism results in fatigue,
weight gain, excessive sleeping, constipation, dry skin, mental
sluggishness and decrease in body temperature. However, a more severe
deficiency as seen here can indeed cause hyperthyroidism.
There is yet a fourth paradox of iodine. Excesses of iodine intake
can cause both hypo- and hyperthyroidism.
How much iodine do we need? And, how much iodine do we get? An
adult needs 150 micrograms (.15 milligrams) of iodine each day.
A pregnant or lactating woman needs 200 micrograms. Many people
consider iodized salt as the main source of dietary iodine for the
US population. Iodination of salt began in 1922 in response to endemic
goiter in the upper Midwest. The campaign to promote "voluntary"
use of iodized salt did solve the endemic. However, iodine is not
only added to salt. Other sources of iodine in the American food
supply include use of iodine products in processing of dairy products
and breads as well as supplementation of beef and chicken, resulting
in variable amounts of iodine in meat, eggs and milk.
Here is the punchline. Although the prevalence of goiter declined
to near zero, "Within 50 years the country had excessive iodine
intake to the extent that other forms of thyroid problems, namely
iodine-induced hypothyroidism, autoimmune thyroiditis, and hyperthyroidism,
had become more common than deficiency disorders." This conclusion
is published in the 1998 Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism
in an article entitled "Iodine Nutrition in the United States."
As the story continues to unfold, the above article, and an article,
"Too Much Versus Too Little: The Implications of Current Iodine
Intake in the United States," published in Nutrition Review in 1999,
both document a significant decline in iodine intake in the last
twenty years, a decline in intake in all ages and both sexes. The
highest incidence of deficiency of iodine is in women 40-49 years
of age and secondly in women 30-60 years of age. Further, 6.7% of
pregnant women and 14.9% of women of childbearing age have documented
iodine deficiency, posing enormous risk of impaired neurological
development to unborn children.
This decrease in iodine intake is attributed to lack of public
awareness of the necessity of iodized salt, decreased salt consumption
due to concern for hypertension, deceased egg yolk consumption secondary
to cholesterol restriction and decreased use of iodine in dairy
processing and commercial bread production.
All of the above calculations and documentations of dietary deficiency
and excess of iodine are based on processed foods. Can an individual
get enough iodine from whole, unprocessed foods? YES!!! Here are
the calculations. The RDA for sodium is 2400 milligrams, or 2.4
grams. (Most Americans ingest between 4 and 6 grams.) Celtic unprocessed
salt is .000045% iodine. If you use 2.4 grams of Celtic salt daily
you will get 108 micrograms of iodine daily. That is more than one-half
the daily requirement for a pregnant or lactating woman (200), and
more than two-thirds the daily requirement for other adults (150).
The remainder of your daily requirement can easily come from kelp
(more iodine than iodized salt) and seafood.
Medically, thyroid function is determined by measurements of the
T3 and T4 hormones and the TSH (thyroid stimulating hormone) produced
by the pituitary. These are necessary and appropriate tests whenever
there is suspicion of hypo- or hyperthyroidism. There are many cases
and causes of both high and low thyroid that do not have iodine
deficiency. The tests however miss many diagnoses of both low and
high thyroid. They do not measure iodine. The most accurate measurement
for iodine status is iodine in the urine. This test is not readily
available. A readily available and easy to repeat test is the Tincture
of Iodine skin absorption test. Tincture of Iodine is at most a
few dollars from the drugstore.
If you are a woman between 30 and 60, and especially if you are
planning a pregnancy, are pregnant or are nursing, do a Tincture
of Iodine patch test. If you are a peri- or menopausal woman, do
a Tincture of Iodine patch test. If the test indicates an iodine
deficiency, it will probably be difficult to correct with food alone.
If the test indicates you are deficient in iodine I recommend adding
kelp (a seaweed) to you diet or taking a supplement of kelp. The
iodine in kelp is bound to a protein. This is the form of iodine
used by the thyroid. Moreover, symptoms --mouth and gastric irritation,
acne-like skin eruptions, a brassy taste, increased salivation--
which may occur from iodine supplementation that is not protein-bound,
will not occur from protein-bound iodine. The real question is whether
it is better to get iodine from natural unprocessed sea salt (Celtic
Salt), seafood, kelp and egg yolks than it is to get it from processed
iodized salt. The answer is YES!!! The answer is "YES" for iodine,
for sodium, and for every nutrient known and unknown. There is no
nutrient that occurs alone in nature. Isolating a nutrient or synthesizing
a nutrient takes the nutrient out of context, out of nature. Now
we have a drug, not a nutrient. Each nutrient exists within a complex
of many other nutrients, all synergistic with each other. We can
quantitate and replicate each component of a nutrient complex. We
can neither quantitate nor replicate synergy in nature, in food.
Dr. Lynne August, of Greenfield NH, is the founder and director
of Health Equations. She received her Medical Degree from Washington
University School of Medicine in 1973. She combined conventional
and holistic medicines in private practice for ten years and soon
after, founded Health Equations. For almost thirty years, Dr. August
has been researching significant influences on health... diet, soil,
water, agriculture, food processing and environmental exposures.
The inspiration in Lynne's clinical practice and research comes
largely from her experience as a Clinical Researcher at the Institute
of Applied Biology in New York. There, Dr. August assisted Scientific
Director Emanuel Revici M.D. in research on non-toxic therapeutic
lipids. She also draws upon her training and practice in Ayurveda.
Prior to her work at the Institute of Applied Biology, Lynne served
on the board of the American Holistic Medical Association, researched
hyperinsulinism and diabetes and served as the staff physician at
a multi-disciplinary research center for children with developmental
needs. Dr. August has been widely published. She lectures at physician
seminars throughout North America and Europe and hosts seminars
for clinical health professionals.
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