Abstract

A study on selenium levels has been carried out in human placenta, maternal and umbilical cord blood, hair and nails of a group of 50 mothers and in the hair of the newborns. The determinations were perfomed by electrothermal atomic absorption spectrometry. The selenium concentration obtained for each sample type was as follows: For the human placenta the values obtained were between 0.56 and 1.06 μg/g (mean±standard deviation: 0.81±0.02 μg/g). The levels for the umbilical cord blood were 51.1–104.2 μg/l (76.3±6.5 μg/l). For the maternal blood the values measured were between 57.3 and 117.9 μg/l (90.0±15.2 μg/l), and for hair and nails were 0.22–1.5 μg/g (0.60±0.37 μg/g) and 0.46–1.57 μg/g (0.90±0.27 μg/g), respectively. For the hair of the newborns the values obtained were between 0.40 and 2.53 μg/g (1.04±0.48 μg/g). The effect of different variables as age, habitat, nutritional index or gestation age of the mothers on the selenium concentration in the samples was studied. The influence of the habitat is significant with a confidence level of 95% for the selenium concentration in maternal blood and umbilical cord blood samples. The influence of the mothers’ age is significant with a confidence level of 95% for the selenium concentration in the umbilical cord blood samples. For the placenta samples, the effect of the nutritional index is significant with a confidence level of 95%. There is a positive correlation between samples of umbilical cord blood and the newborns’ hair, between placenta and umbilical cord, and between cord blood and maternal blood.

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