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Trace nutrients. 4. Iodine in British food.

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TLDR
The average daily intake of I was lower than in similar similar studies in the USA, but was twice the provisional UK recommended intake and provides no evidence that I intakes in the UK could be too low or too high for health.
Abstract
1. The amounts of iodine in nationally representative samples of prepared and cooked groups of foods and in a wide variety of individual foods and food products were determined colorimetrically. The amounts of erythrosine, a red food colour containing 577 mg I/g were also determined in selected foods and diets by high-performance liquid chromatography. 2. The average British diet was calculated to provide 323 micrograms I/d but only 255 micrograms if two fruit samples containing large amounts of glace cherries were discounted. Of the total, 92 micrograms was derived from liquid milk. Meat and meat products provided 36 micrograms and cereal products 31 micrograms, but fresh fruits and sugars, vegetables and beverages provided little I. Fish and fish products, though rich in I, contributed only 5% to the total intake. 3. Milk was the most variable as well as the most important individual source of I. Summer milk samples contained 70 micrograms/kg and winter milk 370 micrograms/kg on average. Milk products, including butter and cheese, and eggs were also rich in I. 4. Some processed foods contained erythrosine, particularly glace cherries and some pink or red confectionery items, biscuits, cherry cake, canned strawberries and luncheon meat. However, none of these are major foods in the average household diet and erythrosine would therefore contribute little more than 10 micrograms I/d to most diets. 5. The average daily intake of I was lower than in similar similar studies in the USA, but was twice the provisional UK recommended intake. This study provides no evidence that I intakes in the UK could be too low or too high for health.U

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Journal ArticleDOI

The distribution and transformations of iodine in the environment

TL;DR: Iodine in the atmosphere is derived largely from seawater as discussed by the authors, and it is probable that the biological production of methyl iodide is important in this transfer, but the magnitude of these processes is difficult to assess.
Journal ArticleDOI

Iodine content of food groups

TL;DR: In this article, isotope dilution inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry using the enriched long-lived nuclide 129I was used to analyze the iodine content of several kinds of foods representing different product groups available on the Swiss market.
Journal ArticleDOI

Environmental iodine intake affects the type of nonmalignant thyroid disease.

TL;DR: Moderate and mild iodine excess are associated with a more frequent occurrence of hypothyroidism, especially in elderly subjects, and more studies are needed to define the limits of excessive iodine intake precisely.
Journal ArticleDOI

Selenium and iodine intakes and status in New Zealand and Australia

TL;DR: Public health recommendations to reduce salt intake, together with the reduction in I content of dairy products, are likely to result in further decreases in the I status of New Zealand and Australian residents and some action is needed to prevent this decline and it may be necessary to consider other means of fortification than iodized salt.
Journal ArticleDOI

Iodine, milk, and the elimination of endemic goitre in Britain: the story of an accidental public health triumph.

TL;DR: Although iodization of dairy herds offers an indirect method of counteracting iodine deficiency, it is haphazard and there should be careful and continuous monitoring of iodine intakes in the population.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Semi-automatic method for the determination of total iodine in food

R. E. D. Moxon, +1 more
- 01 Jan 1980 - 
TL;DR: A simple method for the determination of total iodine in food, based on the catalytic destruction of thiocyanate by nitrite in the presence of iodide, has been evaluated and the colorimetric finish technique automated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Trace nutrients. 2. Manganese in British food.

TL;DR: The average British diet was calculated to provide 4.6 mg Mn/d of which half was derived from tea and other beverages, 30% from cereals, and 15% from vegetables and fruit, and animal products provided little Mn.
Journal ArticleDOI

Thyrotoxicosis induced by iodine contamination of food--a common unrecognised condition?

J C Stewart, +1 more
- 14 Feb 1976 - 
TL;DR: Dietary iodine is rising substantially in many places because of high iodine levels in milk and the use of iodine compounds in automated bread making, and this may be causing unsuspected iodine-induced thyrotoxicosis.
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