Autor según el artículo: Maldonado-Araque C, Valdés S, Lago-Sampedro A, Lillo-Muñoz JA, Garcia-Fuentes E, Perez-Valero V, Gutierrez-Repiso C, Goday A, Urrutia I, Peláez L, Calle-Pascual A, Castaño L, Castell C, Delgado E, Menendez E, Franch-Nadal J, Gaztambide S, Girbés J, Ortega E, Vendrell J, Chacón MR, Chaves FJ, Soriguer F, Rojo-Martínez G
Departamento: Medicina i Cirurgia
Autor/es de la URV: Vendrell Ortega, Juan José
Palabras clave: Thyroid-hormone concentration Serum ferritin Rats Prevalence Maternal hypothyroxinemia Iodine Early-pregnancy Dysfunction Children improves Adolescent iranian girls
Resumen: Previous studies have suggested that iron deficiency (ID) may impair thyroid hormone metabolism, however replication in wide samples of the general adult population has not been performed. We studied 3846 individuals free of thyroid disease, participants in a national, cross sectional, population based study representative of the Spanish adult population. Thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH), free thyroxin (FT4) and free triiodothyronine (FT3) were analyzed by electrochemiluminescence (E170, Roche Diagnostics). Serum ferritin was analyzed by immunochemiluminescence (Architect I2000, Abbott Laboratories). As ferritin levels decreased (>100, 30-100, 15-30, < 15 mu g/L) the adjusted mean concentrations of FT4 (p < 0.001) and FT3 (p < 0.001) descended, whereas TSH levels remained unchanged (p = 0.451). In multivariate logistic regression models adjusted for age, sex, UI, BMI and smoking status, subjects with ferritin levels < 30 mu g/L were more likely to present hypothyroxinemia (FT4 < 12.0 pmol/L p5): OR 1.5 [1.1-2.2] p = 0.024, and hypotriiodothyroninemia (FT3 < 3.9 pmol/L p5): OR 1.8 [1.3-2.6] p = 0.001 than the reference category with ferritin >= 30 mu g/L. There was no significant heterogeneity of the results between men, pre-menopausal and post-menopausal women or according to the iodine nutrition status. Our results confirm an association between ID and hypothyroxinemia and hypotriiodothyroninemia in the general adult population without changes in TSH.
Áreas temáticas: Zootecnia / recursos pesqueiros Saúde coletiva Química Psicología Odontología Nutrição Multidisciplinary sciences Multidisciplinary Medicina veterinaria Medicina iii Medicina ii Medicina i Materiais Matemática / probabilidade e estatística Letras / linguística Interdisciplinar Geografía Geociências Farmacia Engenharias iv Engenharias iii Engenharias ii Enfermagem Educação física Educação Economia Ciências biológicas iii Ciências biológicas ii Ciências biológicas i Ciências ambientais Ciências agrárias i Ciência de alimentos Ciência da computação Biotecnología Biodiversidade Astronomia / física
Acceso a la licencia de uso: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/
ISSN: 20452322
Direcció de correo del autor: juanjose.vendrell@urv.cat
Identificador del autor: 0000-0002-6994-6115
Fecha de alta del registro: 2024-09-07
Versión del articulo depositado: info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Enlace a la fuente original: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-018-24352-9
URL Documento de licencia: https://repositori.urv.cat/ca/proteccio-de-dades/
Referencia al articulo segun fuente origial: Scientific Reports. 8 (1): 6571-
Referencia de l'ítem segons les normes APA: Maldonado-Araque C, Valdés S, Lago-Sampedro A, Lillo-Muñoz JA, Garcia-Fuentes E, Perez-Valero V, Gutierrez-Repiso C, Goday A, Urrutia I, Peláez L, Cal (2018). Iron deficiency is associated with Hypothyroxinemia and Hypotriiodothyroninemia in the Spanish general adult population: Di@bet.es study.. Scientific Reports, 8(1), 6571-. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-24352-9
DOI del artículo: 10.1038/s41598-018-24352-9
Entidad: Universitat Rovira i Virgili
Año de publicación de la revista: 2018
Tipo de publicación: Journal Publications