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Selenium and immune functions in humans.

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TLDR
The results suggest that the selenium deficiency of the order found in Finland and some other areas of the world has little, if any, influence on the immune functions measured in this study.
Abstract
Earlier animal experiments have shown that selenium depletion may decrease immune functions. In this human study, 40 volunteers from a population with low serum selenium concentrations were supplemented with selenium or placebo for 11 weeks. Blood samples were drawn at intervals for analysis of selenium status and immune function. At the end of the supplementation period, plasma selenium levels were 74 ng/ml in the placebo group and 169 ng/ml in the supplemented group. The improvement in selenium status was associated with a 57% increase in the activity of platelet glutathione peroxidase in the group supplemented with selenium, but there was no increase in the activity of this enzyme in the placebo-treated subjects. Immune function was measured in vitro by tests of lymphocyte and granulocyte activity. Intracellular killing of Staphylococcus aureus by granulocytes was slightly lower in the placebo group than in the selenium group at the end of the supplementation period (77.2 compared to 85.2%; P less than 0.05). No significant changes were observed in phagocytosis, chemotactic factor generation, antibody or leukocyte migration inhibitory factor production by lymphocytes, or proliferative responses to phytohemagglutinin or concanavalin A. These results suggest that the selenium deficiency of the order found in Finland and some other areas of the world has little, if any, influence on the immune functions measured in this study.

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Selenium in global food systems.

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Antioxidant supplements for prevention of mortality in healthy participants and patients with various diseases

TL;DR: Primary and secondary prevention randomised clinical trials on antioxidant supplements versus placebo or no intervention found no significant difference in the estimated intervention effect in the primary prevention and the secondary prevention trials, and meta-regression analysis found the risk of bias and type of antioxidant supplement were the only significant predictors of intertrial heterogeneity.
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Advances in understanding selenium's role in the immune system

TL;DR: The past several years have yielded considerable experimental results that selenium is incorporated into the tissues and cells of the reticuloendothelial (immune) system both in animals and humans, and its presence or absence in this system affects immune responsiveness.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Leukotriene B, a potent chemokinetic and aggregating substance released from polymorphonuclear leukocytes

TL;DR: The chemokinetic and aggregating activities released from rat and human PMNs exposed to ionophore A23187 are not due to the release of mono-HETEs but to that of 5,12-di- HETE (leukotriene B), which is active over the concentration range 10 pg ml−1 to 5 ng ml-1.
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Regulation of the immune response by prostaglandins.

TL;DR: A substantial body of evidence implicates prostaglandins E1 and E2 as local feedback inhibitors of T-cell activation in vitro and in vivo and results in an enhanced cellular immune response in a number of different experimental systems.
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Single nutrients and immunity

TL;DR: Major gaps currently exist in knowledge about single nutrient deficits or excesses in terms of their effects on specific functional components of the immune system, and a workshop was sponsored by the Food and Nutrition Board of the American Medical Association to emphasize the diversity of the subject, the magnitude of unsolved problems, and the complexity of interrelationships requiring consideration.
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