Mercury Mineral Fish:Mercury
Fighting Mineral in Fish Overlooked in Heated DebateThe
debate over the relative risks and rewards of seafood continues to drag on, for
reasons that may well be bogus, as we discuss in our companion article, "Attempts
to Agree on Mercury Risks Subverted by Bad Science." We
dont have a big stake in this dispute, since our wild salmon, sablefish,
sardines, and scallops are very low in mercury, and Vital Choice selects and sells
only young, low-weight albacore tuna much lower in mercury than the older, larger
tuna used in standard canned tuna. But
we think you should know about something that affects the safety of fish in general.
In hindsight,
it is astonishing that until very recently, everyone involved in the debate overlooked
a potentially critical component of the scientific controversy: the essential
mineral called selenium. The
seafood-mercury-selenium story The
following essay on the subject of selenium's role in increasing seafood safety
is reprinted here with permission from The Center for Consumer Freedom, and comes
from at its MercuryFacts.com Web site. The
Center for Consumer Freedom is an industry funded non-profit, but we can vouch
for the accuracy of this article, having attended a lecture by the researcher
whose work forms the basis for it: University of North Dakota environmental scientist
Dr. Nicholas Ralston. Excerpted
from MercuryFacts.com The
best science indicates that trace amounts of mercury in the fish Americans eat
simply aren't high enough to pose a health risk. But measuring only mercury further
exaggerates this hypothetical risk. There's another scientific wrinkle that few
environmental groups are talking about -- largely because it doesn't help to promote
their scare campaigns. An accurate picture of the health consequences of eating
fish must include other substances that affect the way mercury interacts with
the human body. Selenium
is plentiful in fish, but the public hasn't heard much about its role in the mercury
puzzle. As biochemists, pharmacologists, and neurologists study this nutrient,
we're gaining a better understanding of its importance. In
scientific jargon, selenium has an unusually high "binding affinity"
for mercury. In layman's terms, this means that when the two elements are found
together, they tend to connect, forming a new substance. This makes it difficult
for the human body to absorb the mercury separately. So when mercury "binds"
to selenium, it's no longer free to "bind" to anything else -- like
brain tissue. The
research world is still developing explanations for exactly how selenium cancels
out mercury's potentially toxic effects, but most scientists accept one of two
competing theories. The
conventional idea describes selenium as a sort of "mercury magnet."
Under this theory, once selenium is digested it can locate and neutralize mercury
molecules. In one study, Japanese researchers found that adding selenium to the
diets of birds "gave complete protection" from large amounts of mercury.
Research carried
out by scientists in Scotland and the Philippines indicates that the relationship
between mercury and selenium is one of "toxicological antagonism." And
in the United States, the Environmental Protection Agency describes selenium as
an element that is "antagonistic to the toxic effects of mercury."
The more recent
selenium hypothesis holds that mercury takes a more active role in the relationship.
Under this theory, when mercury enters the body it seeks out selenium and takes
it out of circulation, preventing the body from creating enzymes that depend on
selenium to perform their functions. Enzymes
are special proteins that control the various steps in chemical reactions that
make life possible. Without enough selenium-based enzymes, the functions of the
brain and other organs can be affected. While
this might sound scary, problems can only occur if we don't get enough selenium
to counteract the trace amounts of mercury in the fish we eat. And fish are so
rich in selenium that this is not likely to happen. The
U.S. Department of Agriculture has measured selenium levels in more than 1,000
commonly consumed foods, and 16 of the 25 best sources of dietary selenium are
ocean fish. niversity
of North Dakota environmental scientist Dr. Nicholas Ralston is an expert on the
relationship between selenium and mercury. Here's how he describes it: Think
of dietary selenium as if it were your income and dietary mercury as if it were
a bill that you need to pay. Just as we all need a certain amount of money to
cover living expenses such as food and rent, we all need a certain amount of selenium
... He
went on to say, Only one major study has shown negative effects from exposure
to mercury from seafood, and that seafood was pilot whale meat. Pilot whale meat
is unusual in that it contains more mercury than selenium. When you eat pilot
whale meat, it's like getting a bill for $400 and a check for less than $100.
If that happens too much, you go bankrupt. On the other hand, if you eat ocean
fish, it's like getting a check in the mail for $500 and getting a bill for $25.
The more that happens, the happier you are. Dr.
Ralston is right. Researchers at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
found that most of the fish we eat contains significantly more selenium than mercury.
Seafood that contains more mercury (Hg) than selenium (Se) includes pilot whale,
tarpon, marlin, and some shark. Fish we most commonly consume, including all forms
of tuna and salmon, are rich in selenium. On
the other end of the scale, pilot whale is by far the worst offender. This may
help explain why researchers in the Faroe Islands insist that dietary mercury
is harmful to island residents. (Unlike the vast majority of people, the Faroese
eat lots of pilot whale meat.) By contrast, a similar study in the Seychelles
Islands -- where people eat lots of selenium-rich fish but no whale meat -- found
no negative health effects from the tiny amounts of mercury in fish. End
of MercuryFacts.com excerpt Picking
up from the above MercuryFacts.com essay, this slide from Dr. Ralstons presentation
at the Seafood & Health 05 conference shows how very selenium-rich common
fish are. (Hg means mercury and Se means selenium.)
The names of
the fish species under the colored bars area a bit blurry. From left to right,
they are: Sole, Flounder, Salmon, Tuna, Pollock, Halibut, Cod, Snapper, Grouper,
Swordfish, US average, and Pilot Whale. The scale on the left measures nanomoles
per gram. Dr.
Ralston included Pilot Whale in this table because, as the MercuryFacts.com essay
says, a hotly disputed mercury study used to set mercury intake standards in the
US was conducted in the Faroe Islands, where Pilot Whale is the major source of
mercury in childrens diets. Unlike
the commercial fish species in the table, Pilot Whale is very low in selenium
and very high in both mercury and PCBs: a chlorinated toxin that may damage brain
function. So,
does the selenium abundant in most popular species protect against damage from
their mercury content absolutely, regardless of how much you eat? Its impossible
to say for sure given the state of the evidence, but its clear that selenium
plays a very substantial protective role.
Editor's
note: We
consider organic whole foods from both plant and animal kingdoms to be a major
key to superior health. We also think it's terribly important to eat fish at least
twice a week to get the essential fatty acids. Here at our house, we only eat
wild Alaskan salmon and other wild seafoods from our friends at Vital Choice.
Click here
to visit Vital Choice Seafood. | Sources:
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and R. Furness. "Mercury and Selenium Interaction: A Review." Ecotoxicology
and Environmental Safety. 1990 Oct 10;21:348-364.
- L.
Raymond and N. Ralston. "Mercury: Selenium interactions and health implications."
SMDJ Seychelles Medical and Dental Journal. 2004 Nov.; Special Issue, Vol 7, No
1.
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Beyrouty and H. Chan. "Co-consumption of selenium and vitamin E altered the
reproductive and developmental toxicity of methylmercury in rats." Neurotoxicology
and Teratology. 2006 Jan;28:49-58.
- K.
Beijer and A. Jernelov. "Ecological Aspects of Mercury-Selenium Interaction
in the Marine Environment." Environmental Health Perspectives. 1978 Aug;25:43-5.
- G.
Ohi et al. "The Protective Potency of Marine Animal Meat Against the Neurotoxicity
of Methylmercury: Its Relationship with the Organ Distribution of Mercury and
Selenium in the Rat." Food and Cosmetics Toxicology. 1980 Apr;18:139-145.
- Y
Sugiura et al. "Selenium Protection Against Mercury Toxicity: High Binding
Affinity of Methylmercury by Selenium Containing Ligands in Comparison with Sulfur
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