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Nutrients

Blood Testing for Selenium

Selenium blood testing measures the amount of selenium in your bloodstream—a trace mineral your body needs but cannot make. Selenium comes from the diet, especially plants grown in selenium‑rich soil and animal foods. After absorption in the gut, it circulates attached to proteins in the blood (notably selenoprotein P) and is built into specialized enzymes as the amino acid selenocysteine. At home blood testing is available in select states. See FAQs below

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Key Benefits

  • Check whether your selenium level sits within a healthy, protective range.
  • Spot deficiency that weakens antioxidant defenses and slows thyroid hormone activation.
  • Flag excess from supplements or exposure that harms hair, nails, gut, and nerves.
  • Clarify fatigue, hair loss, brittle nails, or frequent infections linked to low selenium.
  • Guide safe supplementation, tailoring dose and duration to your measured status.
  • Protect male fertility by correcting low levels that impair sperm structure and motility.
  • Support healthy pregnancy by ensuring adequate levels for thyroid and placental function.
  • Track levels over time during parenteral nutrition, malabsorption, dialysis, or post-bariatric recovery.

What is a Selenium blood test?

Selenium blood testing measures the amount of selenium in your bloodstream—a trace mineral your body needs but cannot make. Selenium comes from the diet, especially plants grown in selenium‑rich soil and animal foods. After absorption in the gut, it circulates attached to proteins in the blood (notably selenoprotein P) and is built into specialized enzymes as the amino acid selenocysteine. A blood test captures this circulating pool that supplies tissues and reflects recent intake and distribution.

Selenium matters because it enables a family of enzymes (selenoproteins) that control oxidative stress, thyroid hormone activation, and immune responses. Key examples include glutathione peroxidases that detoxify peroxides, deiodinases that convert thyroid hormones to their active or inactive forms, and proteins that fine‑tune redox signaling and inflammation. When selenium is available, these systems run efficiently; when it is limited, their activity can be constrained. A blood measurement therefore serves as a window into the body’s access to selenium for antioxidant protection, thyroid hormone balance, and immune function.

Why is a Selenium blood test important?

Selenium is the trace mineral that equips your body’s antioxidant and thyroid enzymes to work. A blood test reflects how well your cells can neutralize oxidative stress, activate thyroid hormone, support immune defenses, and protect tissues like heart muscle, nerves, skin, and reproductive organs.

Most labs report a midrange reference window (often around 70–150). Enzyme systems such as glutathione peroxidase and selenoprotein P saturate once you reach the middle of that range, so “more” does not mean “better.” Health risk follows a U‑shape: problems rise when values sit well below or persistently above the midrange.

When values run low, it usually means selenoproteins cannot be fully built. Antioxidant capacity falls, thyroid hormone conversion (T4 to T3) slows, and immune responses become less resilient. People may notice fatigue, exercise intolerance, brain fog, muscle weakness, frequent infections, hair loss, and brittle nails; cardiomyopathy can appear in severe deficiency. Men can see reduced sperm quality and motility. Children may have growth and infection vulnerability. During pregnancy, low status stresses thyroid function and raises risk of complications.

When values are high, it signals selenosis risk: excess interferes with mitochondrial and thyroid enzyme activity and irritates nerves and skin. Typical features include nausea, diarrhea, a garlic odor on the breath, hair and nail brittleness or shedding, rashes, irritability, and peripheral neuropathy; liver enzymes can rise. Very high levels have been linked in studies to dysglycemia and altered lipid profiles.

Big picture: selenium sits at the crossroads of redox balance, thyroid–metabolic control, and immunity, interacting closely with iodine and protein nutrition. Keeping it in the middle range supports long‑term cardiovascular, neurocognitive, reproductive, and thyroid health, while both deficiency and excess carry meaningful risks.

What insights will I get?

A selenium blood test measures selenium in serum or plasma, largely carried by selenoprotein P and albumin. It reflects the body’s supply for selenoenzymes that drive antioxidant defense (glutathione peroxidases), redox control (thioredoxin reductases), and thyroid hormone activation (deiodinases), with effects on energy metabolism, vascular function, cognition, immunity, and fertility.

Low values usually reflect insufficient intake or absorption, higher demand (for example, pregnancy), or redistribution with inflammation or liver disease. This limits selenoprotein synthesis, reducing peroxide detoxification and T4-to-T3 conversion and weakening antiviral, cytoprotective immunity. Profound deficiency is linked to cardiomyopathy and osteoarthropathy; men may see poorer sperm quality; pregnancy risks include thyroid dysfunction and hypertensive disorders.

Being in range suggests adequate substrate to saturate key selenoenzymes, supporting steady thyroid signaling, balanced oxidative stress, normal endothelial function, and healthy reproductive capacity. Many experts consider the mid-to-upper portion of the reference interval where selenoprotein activity plateaus as functionally within reference ranges.

High values usually reflect excessive supplements or environmental exposure, or reduced excretion in kidney failure. Excess can shift redox balance toward pro-oxidant effects, disrupt thyroid hormone metabolism, and has been linked in some studies to altered glucose and lipid handling. Very high levels cause selenosis (brittle hair and nails, skin changes, neuropathy, gastrointestinal symptoms).

Notes: Serum/plasma selenium tracks recent weeks; erythrocyte or toenail measures reflect longer status. Values fall during acute illness (negative acute-phase) and with low albumin, and run lower in late pregnancy from hemodilution. Assay methods and reference intervals vary, and the chemical form of exposure can influence results.

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Frequently Asked Questions About

What is selenium and why is it important for health?

Selenium is an essential trace mineral that the body cannot produce on its own and must obtain from dietary sources, such as plants grown in selenium-rich soil and animals that consume those plants. Selenium is crucial because it is incorporated into selenoproteins, which are enzymes that protect cells from oxidative stress, support immune function, activate thyroid hormones, and maintain reproductive and nerve health. Adequate selenium status helps regulate metabolism, cardiovascular health, and resilience to stressors, while both deficiency and excess can lead to significant health issues.

How does selenium deficiency affect the body?

Selenium deficiency impairs the body’s ability to produce selenoproteins, weakening antioxidant defenses and reducing the conversion of thyroid hormone to its active form. Symptoms may include fatigue, muscle aches, brain fog, brittle hair and nails, cold intolerance, slowed metabolism, and increased susceptibility to infections. In severe cases, deficiency can cause heart muscle damage (cardiomyopathy), poor sperm quality in men, thyroid dysfunction and immune shifts in pregnancy, and impaired growth and infection risk in children.

What are the signs and symptoms of selenium toxicity (selenosis)?

Selenium toxicity, or selenosis, occurs when selenium levels are excessively high, often due to over-supplementation or high dietary intake. Common symptoms include nausea, diarrhea, a garlic-like breath odor, hair loss, brittle nails, skin rashes, irritability, and peripheral neuropathy. In severe cases, toxicity can disrupt thyroid signaling, elevate liver enzymes, and impair glucose regulation. Chronic high selenium intake offers no health benefit and can be harmful, especially during pregnancy.

How does selenium support thyroid health?

Selenium is essential for thyroid hormone activation because it is a component of deiodinase enzymes that convert inactive thyroid hormone (T4) to its active form (T3). Adequate selenium helps maintain efficient thyroid hormone metabolism, supports energy levels, and is studied for its potential effects on hypothyroid-like symptoms such as fatigue, cold intolerance, and slowed metabolism. Low selenium can strain the thyroid, especially during pregnancy, increasing the risk of thyroid dysfunction and related complications.

Why is it important to monitor selenium status over time?

Tracking selenium status over time helps detect trends and is studied for its potential effects on both deficiency and toxicity. Consistent monitoring using the same laboratory and sample type helps support reliable results. Regular assessment is especially important for individuals using supplements, multivitamins, or IV nutrition, as well as those with changing diets, chronic illness, or pregnancy. Monitoring helps guide safe supplementation and supports optimal health outcomes.

What states are Superpower’s at-home blood testing available in?

Superpower currently offers at-home blood testing in the following states: Alabama, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, and Wisconsin.

We’re actively expanding nationwide, with new states being added regularly. If your state isn’t listed yet, stay tuned.

How does selenium intake affect fertility and pregnancy?

Adequate selenium is vital for reproductive health in both men and women. In men, low selenium can reduce sperm motility and integrity. During pregnancy, selenium supports thyroid function and antioxidant defenses, reducing the risk of thyroid dysfunction and hypertensive complications. Deficiency in pregnancy is linked to adverse immune shifts and poor outcomes, while excess selenium offers no additional benefit and may be harmful.

What foods are good sources of selenium?

Selenium is found in a variety of foods, with the highest concentrations in Brazil nuts, seafood, organ meats, and eggs. The selenium content of plant foods depends on the selenium levels in the soil where they are grown. Animal products from animals raised on selenium-rich feed also provide significant amounts. A balanced diet with diverse sources typically meets selenium requirements for most people.

Can selenium supplementation be harmful?

Yes, excessive selenium supplementation can lead to toxicity (selenosis), with symptoms such as gastrointestinal upset, hair and nail changes, skin rashes, and neurological issues. High-dose supplements, multivitamins, or IV nutrition can easily exceed safe intake levels. Supplementation should be guided by laboratory assessment and medical advice, especially for those with kidney disease or other health conditions affecting selenium metabolism.

What is the relationship between selenium and immune function?

Selenium supports immune defenses by enabling the activity of antioxidant enzymes (such as glutathione peroxidases) that protect immune cells from oxidative damage. Adequate selenium status enhances immune competence, helps the body respond to infections, and supports recovery from illness. Deficiency can blunt immune responses, leading to more frequent or severe infections, while selenium levels within reference ranges help maintain immune balance and resilience.

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