Are Your Patients at Risk?
Zinc and Selenium are Well-Known, Essential, and Possibly Lacking in Your Patients’ Diets.
Zinc and selenium are essential for a strong immune response, defense against tumors, and overall inflammation reduction and protection against disease. But it’s very likely your patients don’t get enough of them from diet alone, which could put them at great risk.
Why Zinc and Selenium? For Critical Reasons:
Zinc Fights Viruses and Bacteria
Zinc is a requirement for T-lymphocyte (white blood cell) activity that fights bacterial and viral threats. It also acts as a messenger, relaying frontline updates about these threats between the innate and adaptive immune systems. This allows these systems to kick into gear to stop a familiar illness or adapt to stop novel viruses that someone has not previously encountered.
Zinc stops viruses from replicating because it halts the proteins in those viruses from using the host’s own cells to create more copies of itself. Because of this, zinc can have a noticeable effect on reducing cold and flu symptoms. In fact, researchers who pooled the results of three clinical studies found zinc reduced the duration of cold symptoms by 42 percent compared to a placebo. But the timing of zinc is critical. These same researchers noted taking zinc at the first sign of symptoms is what accounts for results within the first 24 hours.
The Synergy of these Minerals
Research indicates that zinc works synergistically with selenium in the immune system. A lack of either mineral can lead to increased oxidative stress, more inflammation, and out of balance CD4/CD8 lymphocyte ratios—contributing factors to the cytokine storms that are prevalent in serious COVID-19 cases. Without zinc and selenium, individuals may be much more prone to dealing with respiratory issues.
For example, selenium and zinc levels tend to be lower in cases of asthma. Clinical research has shown that these deficiencies ramp up C-reactive protein levels, create an imbalance of lymphocytes, lower levels of antioxidant enzyme activity (like glutathione), and simply reduce overall respiratory function.
Selenium restores antioxidant capacity in the lungs, and moderates inflammation in the lungs through interleukin-1-beta (IL-1B) and interleukin-6 (IL-6) pathways, providing a measured immune response. This is a key point for anybody who deals with allergies, asthma, or other conditions where an immune response that is too intense could be a liability rather than a comfort.
Selenium can also be used as an add-on therapy for treating viral and bacterial infections. It fights influenza-A (a common flu) and appears to stop (or at least slow down) more contagious viruses as well.
As with zinc, a selenium deficiency puts immune resilience at risk. Research from the University of Chapel Hill in North Carolina shows selenium deficiencies can make individuals more susceptible to viral variants, because their cells just can’t withstand the attack. So, even though someone might recover from one virus, if a variant comes along fast enough, they may not have the reserved strength to fight it effectively.
Tumor Reduction and Cancer Prevention
Some of the same anti-inflammatory and antioxidant attributes that make zinc and selenium so powerful for immune defense also make them effective for tumor reduction and cancer prevention.
Regarding supplementation, it is important that your patients know that zinc is not readily available for the body to pull from reserves when it is needed. Also, the zinc they may have on board could be depleted quickly due to stress, injuries, infections, or simply normal immune-protective activity.
This may be why deficiencies of zinc are reported in cases of lung and breast cancers—there simply isn’t enough zinc on board to stop these conditions from starting in the first place.
Zinc is critical for proper cell division and differentiation, DNA and RNA repair, and the strength and stability of your cells. Zinc reduces the risk of tumor development because it balances the ratio of T-helper cells—the same cells that protect you from viruses—and it stimulates the release of interferon gamma (INF-y), a cytokine that kills cancer cells and stops the spread of tumors.
Selenium deficiencies are, likewise, a risk factor for cancer. In addition to strengthening immune defenses, selenoproteins from selenium reduce the risk of tumors by interrupting flawed DNA replication that would otherwise be the starting signal for cancer growth.
Findings originally reported in the Journal of the American Medical Association showed that 200 mcg of supplemental selenium daily significantly reduces the incidence of lung and prostate cancers, especially in individuals who were deficient in the mineral.
Inflammation Reduction
Zinc and selenium also inhibit inflammation, help wounds heal faster, and may be a key factor in reducing the pain of chronic joint conditions. Additionally, zinc deficiencies can make rheumatoid arthritis symptoms even more severe, and this may be an area of concern for some of your patients.
For cuts, abrasions, and other injuries, zinc helps repair tissues at a molecular level. Within the first 24 hours of an injury, zinc levels increase up to 20 percent in the immediate area surrounding a wound. As the tissues actively heal, that level bumps up to 30 percent.
In the cases of injuries due to an active lifestyle, selenium may also help your patients heal faster, because one of the mineral’s major components, glutathione peroxidase, inhibits oxidation at the site of inflammatory injury and prevents damage to mitochondrial DNA.
Selenium can also inhibit aging because it preserves the length of telomeres, the protective protein structures found at the ends of each chromosome. Telomere length is a kind of natural calendar; each time a cell divides, it gets slightly shorter. And ultimately, that comes with a price—older individuals with greatly shortened telomere length may have three times greater risk of dying from heart disease, and eight times increased risk of mortality from infectious diseases.
Is it Time to Add Zinc and Selenium to Your Patients’ Protocol?
If your patients aren’t getting enough zinc and selenium through diet alone, it may be time to add this mineral combination to their protocol. Supplemental zinc chelated to the amino acid glycine is efficiently and effectively absorbed, so it can deliver consistent levels of the nutrient. Supplemental selenium in the selenium yeast form (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) is readily bioavailable, and has been shown to reduce the risk of cancers, making it a true essential.
So, while each mineral no doubt has good name recognition, ensuring that patients have what they need for optimal health may require your additional expertise to let them know what a critical difference these nutrients can make.
What we recommend:
Zinc (from zinc bisglycinate chelate) 30 mg
Selenium (as selenium yeast) (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) 200 mcg