Most of us know iodine as the tablets we may have used to disinfect water on tramping trips or the infection-preventing tincture our parents might have applied to our cuts and scapes and which made these minor injuries look so dramatic.
What we may not realise is the true intimacy of our essential relationship with this life-sustaining mineral. Iodine, the heaviest element utilised by the human body, was part of that primal ‘soup’ in that cradle of life - the ocean – and is one of the basic components of all life forms on this planet. It’s strong presence in the ocean and in marine life is mirrored in our bodies where it is found in every one of our organism’s roughly hundred trillion cells.
Systemically crucial to balanced, co-ordinated and well-paced bodily functions on many levels, a deficiency causes hormonal and far-reaching metabolic dysfunction.
What we may not realise is the true intimacy of our essential relationship with this life-sustaining mineral. Iodine, the heaviest element utilised by the human body, was part of that primal ‘soup’ in that cradle of life - the ocean – and is one of the basic components of all life forms on this planet. It’s strong presence in the ocean and in marine life is mirrored in our bodies where it is found in every one of our organism’s roughly hundred trillion cells.
Systemically crucial to balanced, co-ordinated and well-paced bodily functions on many levels, a deficiency causes hormonal and far-reaching metabolic dysfunction.
Most prominently associated with the thyroid, iodine enables that gland to synthesise thyroid hormones, notably T3 and T4. These hormones, whose imbalance create hypothyroidism (underactive metabolism often associated with obesity) or hyperthyroidism (overactive metabolism often resulting in an emaciated state), require sufficient iodine in order to be synthesised in adequate amounts. There are 59 diseases associated with a dysfunctional thyroid, as this gland and the hormones it produces regulate body temperature; heart and, by extension, respiratory rate; glucose consumption; energy- ATP production and also strongly influence mental and immune function.
Iodine deficiency has risen 400% in the last four decades. The World Health Organisation estimates that 72% of global population and 96% of US population are iodine deficient. This is the result of soils lacking iodine and iodine being displaced in our bodies by environmental contaminants.
A brief summary of iodine’s involvement in crucial physiological processes would include the following:
Dosage
IN 1922 Iodine was proven to reverse goiter in a study which prompted the US to begin iodising salt. Today, along with salt getting bad press, less than 20 – 25% of salt is iodised anymore. The US Food and Drug Administration now recommends a daily iodine intake of 150-290 micrograms depending on age, gender and life cycle while some leading iodine experts suggest 12-18 milligrams daily – 45 times higher. In Japan the average daily intake is 13.8 milligrams and pre-Fukushima, the Japanese had significantly lower incidence of breast and prostate cancer as well as overall superior health and longevity compared to the US. Up to 100mg (100,000 mcg) daily were safely used in a major recent iodine study.
Safe dosage becomes a non-issue when taking Iodine transdermally (absorbed through the skin) as the body will stop absorbing essential minerals taken in this way when sufficiency levels have been reached. Lugol’s solution is a standard laboratory formulation of elemental iodine and potassium iodide and is typically used for iodine supplementation.
Contrary to corporate pharmaceutical spin, synthetic chemicals are not requirements for our body, but minerals such as magnesium, potassium and iodine were designated essential for very good reasons. We should take heed that mineral deficiencies and imbalances cause at least as wide an array of health problems as lack of vitamins and enzymes and, as farmers already know as regarding their animals, these are relatively easy and most worthwhile to remedy.
Iodine deficiency has risen 400% in the last four decades. The World Health Organisation estimates that 72% of global population and 96% of US population are iodine deficient. This is the result of soils lacking iodine and iodine being displaced in our bodies by environmental contaminants.
A brief summary of iodine’s involvement in crucial physiological processes would include the following:
- Iodine is an important factor in cell apoptosis – the programmed death of unhealthy cells which results in a reduced risk of sick cells turning malignant
- There are active thyroid hormone receptor sites in the 3000 – 5000 mitochondria present in all bodily cells. Sufficient iodine to activate the thyroid results in increased ATP production in cells and a significant increased yield of energy to cells and the whole organism.
- The tissues of numerous organs and glands, besides the thyroid, have a particularly high content of iodine and prevention of cancer in breasts, stomach, ovaries, thyroid and esophagus, are associated with sufficiency of iodine. Women with iodine deficiency were found to experience triple the incidence of breast cancer. Iodine deficiency also has a relationship to increased fibrocystic breast disease with significant improvement following iodine supplementation.
- Thyroid hormones whose production is fuelled by iodine, increase protein synthesis and oxygen consumption as well as key biochemical reactions such as enzymatic activity. Thyroid hormones mediate the function and development of major organs and also greatly influence the progress of the developing fetus. Deficiency during pregnancy puts the fetus at increased risk of retardation, dyslexia, hyperactivity, miscarriage, stillbirth and more.
- Iodine is the benefactor in a family of highly toxic elements called the halogens which include flourine, chlorine and bromine. These extremely damaging substances contaminating us via water, plastics, pesticides, food additives, household chemicals, etc can fit the same receptor sites as iodine, replacing it through a mechanism termed competitive inhibition. Only by the intake of sufficient iodine can these toxins be displaced and eliminated.
- Iodine is a powerful antibiotic which destroys viruses, bacteria, fungi and parasites.
- Radioactive Iodine 131 will fill the void created by insufficient Iodine 127 (natural ,stable Iodine) in the thyroid. After any nuclear event, such as Fukushima, Chernobyl, weapons testing etc, protecting your tyroid from absorption of the radioactive isotope of iodine and likely consequent thyroid cancer is one major priority.
- Iodine is essential to mental functioning. Low thyroid function impairs brain circulation and slows intellectual capabilities.
- Proper thyroid function is essential to heart health as it regulates heart rate. Hypothyroidism leads to heart disease by weakening the heart muscle causing cardiac arrhythmia.
- Iodine regulates estrogen production in the ovaries.
- Low thyroid function is associated with Type 2 diabetes. 50 -100 mg of iodine daily has been found to decrease insulin requirements in diabetics.
Dosage
IN 1922 Iodine was proven to reverse goiter in a study which prompted the US to begin iodising salt. Today, along with salt getting bad press, less than 20 – 25% of salt is iodised anymore. The US Food and Drug Administration now recommends a daily iodine intake of 150-290 micrograms depending on age, gender and life cycle while some leading iodine experts suggest 12-18 milligrams daily – 45 times higher. In Japan the average daily intake is 13.8 milligrams and pre-Fukushima, the Japanese had significantly lower incidence of breast and prostate cancer as well as overall superior health and longevity compared to the US. Up to 100mg (100,000 mcg) daily were safely used in a major recent iodine study.
Safe dosage becomes a non-issue when taking Iodine transdermally (absorbed through the skin) as the body will stop absorbing essential minerals taken in this way when sufficiency levels have been reached. Lugol’s solution is a standard laboratory formulation of elemental iodine and potassium iodide and is typically used for iodine supplementation.
Contrary to corporate pharmaceutical spin, synthetic chemicals are not requirements for our body, but minerals such as magnesium, potassium and iodine were designated essential for very good reasons. We should take heed that mineral deficiencies and imbalances cause at least as wide an array of health problems as lack of vitamins and enzymes and, as farmers already know as regarding their animals, these are relatively easy and most worthwhile to remedy.