enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Ethylenediamine dihydroiodide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethylenediamine_dihydroiodide

    EDDI is used as an additive in pet food and cattle feed with high bioavailability. Used to prevent iodine deficiency, this salt is one of the major uses of the element iodine. [1] The United States Food and Drug Administration suggests a limit of intake to 50 mg/head/day. [2]

  3. Iodine deficiency - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iodine_deficiency

    Iodine deficiency is a lack of the trace element iodine, an essential nutrient in the diet.It may result in metabolic problems such as goiter, sometimes as an endemic goiter as well as congenital iodine deficiency syndrome due to untreated congenital hypothyroidism, which results in developmental delays and other health problems.

  4. Feed additive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feed_additive

    Several elements enhance the growth characteristics of animals. Elements themselves are rarely used as additives but derivatives thereof. Ethylenediamine dihydroiodide (EDDI) is added to pet food and cattle feed to prevent iodine deficiency. [5] A controversial additive is arsenic, often supplied in the form of the organoarsenic compound called ...

  5. Congenital iodine deficiency syndrome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Congenital_iodine...

    Iodine deficiency is the most common preventable cause of neonatal and childhood brain damage worldwide. [11] Although iodine is found in many foods, it is not universally present in all soils in adequate amounts. Most iodine, in iodide form, is in the oceans, where the iodide ions are reduced to elemental iodine, which then enters the ...

  6. Iodide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iodide

    A test for the presence of iodide ions is the formation of yellow precipitates of these compounds upon treatment of a solution of silver nitrate or lead(II) nitrate. [2] Aqueous solutions of iodide salts dissolve iodine better than pure water. This effect is due to the formation of the triiodide ion, which is brown: I − + I 2 ⇌ I − 3

  7. Iodised salt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iodised_salt

    A national program with iodized salt started in 1992. A national survey of 1990 revealed the prevalence of iodine deficiency to be 20-80% in different parts of Iran indicating a major public health problem. Central provinces, far from the sea, had the highest prevalence of iodine deficiency. The national salt enrichment program was very successful.

  8. Chelates in animal nutrition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chelates_in_animal_nutrition

    The role in fertility and reproductive diseases of dairy cattle highlights that organic forms of Zn are retained better than inorganic sources and so may provide greater benefit in disease prevention, notably mastitis and lameness. Animals are thought to better absorb, digest, and use mineral chelates than inorganic minerals or simple salts. [1]

  9. Mastitis in dairy cattle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mastitis_in_dairy_cattle

    Mastitis, a potentially fatal mammary gland infection, is the most common disease in dairy cattle in the United States and worldwide. It is also the most costly disease to the dairy industry . [ 1 ] Milk from cows suffering from mastitis has an increased somatic cell count .