Nutrients (Oct 2022)

Association between Elevated Iodine Intake and IQ among School Children in Portugal

  • Irene P. Carvalho,
  • Bruno Peixoto,
  • José Carlos Caldas,
  • Ana Costa,
  • Sofia Silva,
  • Bárbara Moreira,
  • Agostinho Almeida,
  • André Moreira-Rosário,
  • António Guerra,
  • Cristina Delerue-Matos,
  • Diana Sintra,
  • Diogo Pestana,
  • Edgar Pinto,
  • Francisca Castro Mendes,
  • Inês Martins,
  • João Costa Leite,
  • Manuel Fontoura,
  • Maria Luz Maia,
  • Pedro Queirós,
  • Roxana Moreira,
  • Sandra Leal,
  • Sónia Norberto,
  • Vera Costa,
  • Virgínia Cruz Fernandes,
  • Elisa Keating,
  • Luís Azevedo,
  • Conceição Calhau

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14214493
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 21
p. 4493

Abstract

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The goal of this work was to examine whether elevated iodine intake was associated with adverse effects on IQ among school-age children in Portugal. In a representative sample of children from the north of the country, IQ percentiles by age (assessed with Raven’s Colored Progressive Matrices) were dichotomized to N = 1965) was classified as generally iodine-adequate (median urinary iodine concentration = 129 µg/L; median iodine-to-creatinine ratio = 126 µg/g) according to the WHO’s criteria. A greater proportion of children in the ≥250 µg/g group had below-average IQs, compared to children with less than 250 µg/g (p = 0.037), despite a sizable (though non-significant) proportion of children in the less-than-250 µg/g group also presenting below-average IQs, at the bottom of the iodine distribution (p = 0.047). The association remained significant after the adjustment for confounders, with the elevated iodine group showing increased odds of having below-average IQs when compared with the non-elevated iodine group (OR 1.55; 95% CI 1.11–2.17; p = 0.011). Consistently, the former group presented a lower mean IQ than the latter (p = 0.006). High iodine intake was associated with lower IQs even in a population classified as iodine-adequate. These results bear on child cognition and on initiatives involving iodine supplementation.

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