A new policy statement from The American Academy of Pediatrics finds that many women, including up to 1/3 of pregnant women, may have low levels of iodine putting them at risk for iodine deficiency. The reason for the deficiency is the changing food source. Over the last 20-30 years our major source of salt has shifted away from table salt (supplemented with iodine) to salt from processed foods, sea salt or gourmet salts that have no supplemental iodine. This is especially important for breastfeeding and pregnant women as iodine is essential for thyroid function that supports fetal and newborn brain development.
This policy statement was news to me. I had no idea that the salt used to make most processed foods lacked iodine, that the majority of prenatal vitamins didn’t provide iodine, and the number of women who may have a deficiency. I’m not alone; when I polled my Mama Doc Facebook community most moms & many doctors also commented this was a newsflash. Here’s more:
Iodine Deficiencies– Shifting Sources Salt
- WHY ARE WE DEFICIENT? Most processed foods made are with salt that is not iodized. Since we get most of our salt from those foods we’re taking in less iodine than we used to.
- TABLE SALT INTAKE: Table salt is iodized, many gourmet salts are not. Consider ensuring that when cooking in your home (ie putting salt in the pasta water or salting the veggies) you use iodized table salt so your intake of iodine goes back up. REMEMBER: this doesn’t mean you should eat MORE salt, just swap in the table salt for the fancy salts when you can.
- WHY DO WE NEED IODINE? We need iodine for thyroid hormone synthesis as thyroid is essential in brain development and metabolism. The policy reminds us that even mild iodine deficincy can affect fetal and early childhood neurocognitive development stating, “adequate thyroid hormone production is critical in pregnant women and neonates because thyroid hormone is required for brain development in children.” The recommendations from AAP spelled out:
New American Academy of Pediatrics Recommendations
- Pregnant & Breastfeeding Moms: New research has found that up to 1/3 of pregnant women may be iodine deficient. Because their thyroid function is dependent on adequate iodine, the new recommendations target their intake to at least 290 micrograms daily.
- Isn’t this in my prenatal? Research has also found that only about 15-20% of prenatal vitamins have the iodine you need (290 micrograms). You can up your iodine in your diet by eating food high in iodine (seaweed, cod, baked potato w skin, shellfish). If you don’t do that, recommendations are to take 150µg of Iodine daily on top of your regular diet while pregnant or breastfeeding.
- Iodine Deficiency And Pollutants: The statement also discusses how some environmental pollutants can compete with iodine for transport into thyroid tissue. Therefore if you’re somewhat iodine deficient and exposed to these chemicals, your thyroid function may suffer even more. So, work to avoid nitrates (found in well water), perchlorate (found in about 4% of public drinking water), and thiocyanate (found most often in cigarette and second-hand smoke). Taking supplemental iodine will help ensure these pollutants are not more dangerous to you or your baby!
The Skinny On Iodine Supplementation: 3 Things To Know
- Iodine deficiency can affect a fetus or baby’s development. Deficiency can also increase if exposure to certain pollutants in the environment. This is “news” because deficiency is more common today than it was decades ago due to our shifting salt intake (explained above).
- If you or a family member is pregnant or breastfeeding ask your doctor about taking 150 micrograms of iodine daily.
- Use iodized table salt for cooking when you can. If you’re not interested in taking supplements while pregnant or breastfeeding, consider increasing dietary iodine with seaweed, some fish, shellfish or veggies high in iodine.
Gwen says
So, does this mean that women who are actively trying to conceive should also be taking an iodine supplement?
Wendy Sue Swanson, MD, MBE says
Hi Gwen,
The guidelines currently don’t recommend supplementation of iodine for those trying to conceive. That being said, you could switch back to using iodized salt for cooking now if you’ve moved away from it.
But iodine in excess can cause problems, too, so no need to rush or take in large amounts of iodine when unnecessary.
Here’s info from American Thyroid Association:
“Are there problems with taking too much iodine?
Taking too much iodine can also cause problems. This is especially true in individuals that already have thyroid problems, such as nodules, hyperthyroidism and autoimmune thyroid disease. Administration of large amounts of iodine through medications (ie Amiodarone), radiology procedures (iodinated intravenous dye) and dietary excess (Dulce, kelp) can cause or worsen hyperthyroidism and hypothyroidism.”
https://www.thyroid.org/iodine-deficiency/
Amy Herrera says
I saw this last week (or whenever), but I don’t think it would apply to me… 90% of our food is from scratch, and I refuse to spend extra money on fancy salt when the iodized stuff is practically free at the grocery store.
I even tend to buy low sodium / no salt added canned foods and salt to taste just because I figure it’s generally healthier. So pregnant moms with these habits shouldn’t have too much to worry about, right?
Anonymous says
I was told I have Graves’ disease (hyperthyroid) does that mean I should not take iodized salt?