Endemic goitre in a rural community of KwaZulu-Natal

To quantity the prevalence of goitre and iodine deficiency. Ndunakazi, a rural community of approximately 8000 people in KwaZulu-Natal. A cross-sectional community-based survey and a school-based survey. The 127 mothers and 114 children aged 6-11 years, selected during the cross-sectional survey, an...

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Veröffentlicht in:South African medical journal 1997-03, Vol.87 (3), p.310-313
Hauptverfasser: BENADE, J. G, OELOFSE, A, VAN STUIJVENBERG, M. E, JOOSTE, P. L, WEIGHT, M. J, BENADE, A. J. S
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container_end_page 313
container_issue 3
container_start_page 310
container_title South African medical journal
container_volume 87
creator BENADE, J. G
OELOFSE, A
VAN STUIJVENBERG, M. E
JOOSTE, P. L
WEIGHT, M. J
BENADE, A. J. S
description To quantity the prevalence of goitre and iodine deficiency. Ndunakazi, a rural community of approximately 8000 people in KwaZulu-Natal. A cross-sectional community-based survey and a school-based survey. The 127 mothers and 114 children aged 6-11 years, selected during the cross-sectional survey, and 304 children aged 5-14 years, from the school-based survey. Urinary iodine levels and thyroid size were determined and categorised according to guidelines proposed jointly by the WHO, UNICEF and the ICCIDD. Z-score anthropometric indicators were calculated, and mid-year exam marks of goitrous and non-goitrous pupils for Zulu and mathematics were compared. In school-aged children, both surveys demonstrated a goitre prevalence in the 20-29.9% range and a median urinary iodine level in the 2-4.9 micrograms/dl range, indicating iodine deficiency of moderate severity. Goitrous subjects scored consistently worse in their Zulu exam papers than those without goitre. Stunting was not more prevalent than in the rest of KwaZulu-Natal. Iodised salt was not available in any of the three community shops. This level of iodine deficiency in children can adversely affect their neuropsycho-intellectual development. Factors contributing to deficient iodine intake in Ndunakazi are present in many rural areas, and South Africa cannot afforded to be overly confident about the apparent absence of iodine deficiency as a public health problem.
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In school-aged children, both surveys demonstrated a goitre prevalence in the 20-29.9% range and a median urinary iodine level in the 2-4.9 micrograms/dl range, indicating iodine deficiency of moderate severity. Goitrous subjects scored consistently worse in their Zulu exam papers than those without goitre. Stunting was not more prevalent than in the rest of KwaZulu-Natal. Iodised salt was not available in any of the three community shops. This level of iodine deficiency in children can adversely affect their neuropsycho-intellectual development. 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In school-aged children, both surveys demonstrated a goitre prevalence in the 20-29.9% range and a median urinary iodine level in the 2-4.9 micrograms/dl range, indicating iodine deficiency of moderate severity. Goitrous subjects scored consistently worse in their Zulu exam papers than those without goitre. Stunting was not more prevalent than in the rest of KwaZulu-Natal. Iodised salt was not available in any of the three community shops. This level of iodine deficiency in children can adversely affect their neuropsycho-intellectual development. 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source MEDLINE; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Adolescent
Biological and medical sciences
Child
Cross-Sectional Studies
Endocrinopathies
Female
Goiter, Endemic - blood
Goiter, Endemic - epidemiology
Goiter, Endemic - etiology
Humans
Iodine - deficiency
Iodine - urine
Male
Medical sciences
Non tumoral diseases. Target tissue resistance. Benign neoplasms
Prevalence
Rural Population
South Africa - epidemiology
Thyroid. Thyroid axis (diseases)
Tropical medicine
title Endemic goitre in a rural community of KwaZulu-Natal
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