Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0240066 (iron deficiency)
7,156 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Ten patients with manifest iron deficiency and without documented relationship to phenylketonuria patients were orally loaded with 25 mg/kg of L-(2H5)phenylalanine. Before loading, the fasting phenylalanine-tyrosine plasma ratio was determined and after loading, the concentrations of labeled and nonlabeled phenylalanine and tyrosine were determined in five consecutive plasma samples. With respect to the fasting phenylalanine-tyrosine ratio and to the post-load ratios of labeled phenylalanine over labeled tyrosine, the iron-deficient patients showed data intermediate between those of normals and heterozygotes for phenylketonuria. Compared to a 100% in vivo activity of phenylalanine hydroxylase in normals and a circa 37% activity in heterozygotes for classic phenylketonuria, iron-deficient patients with an average hemoglobin of 8.6 +/- 1 g/dl showed an activity of circa 56%. After normalization of their iron status, four patients were subjected again to the L-(2H5)phenylalanine-loading test. For three of these individuals, test results shifted into the range of normal.
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PMID:Impaired phenylalanine-tyrosine conversion in patients with iron-deficiency anemia studied by a L-(2H5)phenylalanine-loading test. 376 33

Several minerals and trace elements are essential for normal thyroid hormone metabolism, e.g., iodine, iron, selenium, and zinc. Coexisting deficiencies of these elements can impair thyroid function. Iron deficiency impairs thyroid hormone synthesis by reducing activity of heme-dependent thyroid peroxidase. Iron-deficiency anemia blunts and iron supplementation improves the efficacy of iodine supplementation. Combined selenium and iodine deficiency leads to myxedematous cretinism. The normal thyroid gland retains high selenium concentrations even under conditions of inadequate selenium supply and expresses many of the known selenocysteine-containing proteins. Among these selenoproteins are the glutathione peroxidase, deiodinase, and thioredoxine reductase families of enzymes. Adequate selenium nutrition supports efficient thyroid hormone synthesis and metabolism and protects the thyroid gland from damage by excessive iodide exposure. In regions of combined severe iodine and selenium deficiency, normalization of iodine supply is mandatory before initiation of selenium supplementation in order to prevent hypothyroidism. Selenium deficiency and disturbed thyroid hormone economy may develop under conditions of special dietary regimens such as long-term total parenteral nutrition, phenylketonuria diet, cystic fibrosis, or may be the result of imbalanced nutrition in children, elderly people, or sick patients.
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PMID:The impact of iron and selenium deficiencies on iodine and thyroid metabolism: biochemistry and relevance to public health. 1248 69