Abstract

BackgroundSelenium is part of the antioxidant defence system in animals and humans. The available selenium concentration in soil is low in many regions of the world. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of organic versus inorganic selenium supplementation on selenium status of ewes, their lambs, and slaughter lambs.MethodsEwes on four organic farms were allocated five or six to 18 pens. The ewes were given either 20 mg/kg inorganic selenium as sodium selenite or organic selenium as selenized nonviable yeast supplementation for the two last months of pregnancy. Stipulated selenium concentrations in the rations were below 0.40 mg/kg dry matter. In addition 20 male lambs were given supplements from November until they were slaughtered in March. Silage, hay, concentrates, and individual ewe blood samples were taken before and after the mineral supplementation period, and blood samples were taken from the newborn lambs. Blood samples from ewes and lambs in the same pens were pooled. Muscle samples were taken from slaughter lambs in March. Selenium concentrations were determined by atomic absorption spectrometry with a hydride generator system. In the ANOVA model, selenium concentration was the continuous response variable, and selenium source and farm were the nominal effect variables. Two-sample t-test was used to compare selenium concentrations in muscle samples from the slaughtered lambs that received either organic or inorganic selenium supplements.ResultsIn all ewe pens the whole blood selenium concentrations increased during the experimental period. In addition, ewe pens that received organic selenium had significantly higher whole blood selenium concentrations (mean 0.28 μg/g) than ewe pens that received inorganic selenium (mean 0.24 μg/g). Most prominent, however, was the difference in their lambs; whole blood mean selenium concentration in lambs from mothers that received organic selenium (mean 0.27 μg/g) was 30% higher than in lambs from mothers that received inorganic selenium (mean 0.21 μg/g). Slaughter lambs that received organic selenium had 50% higher meat selenium concentrations (mean 0.12 mg/kg wet weight) than lambs that received inorganic selenium (mean 0.08 mg/kg wet weight).ConclusionOrganic selenium supplementation gave higher selenium concentration in ewe and newborn lamb blood and slaughter lamb meat than inorganic selenium supplementation.

Highlights

  • Selenium is part of the antioxidant defence system in animals and humans

  • Most prominent was the significant difference in the lambs; lambs from mothers that received organic selenium had nearly 30% higher whole blood selenium concentrations (0.27 ± 0.01 μg/g) than lambs from mothers that received inorganic selenium (0.21 ± 0.01 μg/g)

  • Muscle selenium concentrations from 7 lambs that received inorganic selenium supplement and 13 lambs that received organic selenium are plotted in figure 2

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Summary

Introduction

Selenium is part of the antioxidant defence system in animals and humans. The selenium concentration in soil is low in many parts of the world including the Nordic countries where it is poorly available because of low soil pH [1,2,3,4,5]. Animals fed roughage grown in selenium-deficient areas and not supplemented with minerals are vulnerable to oxidant stress. Clinical selenium deficiency is rare among humans. In certain areas of China, selenium deficiency predisposes patients to Keshan disease, an endemic viral cardiomyopathy which primarily affects children and young women. In Siberian Russia and China, growing children with selenium deficiency may develop chronic osteoarthropathy (Kashin-Beck disease) [7]. According to experimental animal studies and some observational epidemiological studies in humans, higher selenium intakes might reduce the risk of certain types of cancer [9,10]

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