Dictionary Definition
iodide n : a salt or ester of hydriodic
acid
User Contributed Dictionary
Derived terms
- americium iodide
- ammonium iodide
- auric iodide
- aurous iodide
- barium iodide
- bismuthous iodide
- cadmium iodide
- caesium iodide, cesium iodide
- chloriodide, chloroiodide
- chlorobromiodide
- cuprous iodide
- curium iodide
- diiodide
- ethyl iodide
- hydrogen iodide
- indium iodide
- iodidate
- iodiodide
- iodide of iodammonium
- iron iodide
- kalium iodide
- lead iodide
- lithium iodide
- manganese iodide
- oxyiodide
- phosphonium iodide
- potassium iodide
- radium iodide
- scandium iodide
- silver iodide
- sodium iodide
- stannous iodide
- sulfiodide, sulphiodide
- thallious iodide
- triiodide
- tungsten iodide
Translations
Extensive Definition
An iodide ion is an iodine atom with a −1
charge .
Compounds with iodine in formal oxidation
state −1 are called iodides. This can include
ionic compounds such as
caesium
iodide or covalent
compounds such as carbon
tetraiodide. This is the same naming scheme as is seen with
chlorides and bromides. The chemical test for
an iodide compound is to acidify the aqueous compound by adding
some drops of acid, to
dispel any carbonate ions present, then adding lead(II)
nitrate, yielding a bright yellow precipitate of lead iodide.
Most ionic iodides are soluble, with the exception of yellow
silver
iodide and yellow lead iodide.
Aqueous solutions of iodide dissolve iodine better than pure water
due to the formation of complex
ions:
- I−(aq) + I2(s) I3−(aq)
The colour of new triiodide ions formed are
brown.
Examples
Examples or common iodides include:- hydrogen iodide (HI)
- sodium iodide (NaI)
- potassium iodide (KI)
- carbon tetraiodide (CI4)
- silver iodide (AgI)
- nitrogen triiodide (NI3)
Iodide as an antioxidant
Iodide can function as an antioxidant as it is a reducing species that can detoxify reactive oxygen species such as hydrogen peroxide. Over three billion years ago, blue-green algae were the most primitive oxygenic photosynthetic organisms and are the ancestors of multicellular eukaryotic algae (1). Algae that contain the highest amount of iodine (1-3 % of dry weight) and peroxidase enzymes, were the first living cells to produce poisonous oxygen in the atmosphere . Therefore algal cells required a protective antioxidant action of their molecular components, in which iodides, through peroxidase enzymes, seem to have had this specific role . In fact, iodides are greatly present and available in the sea, where algal phytoplankton, the basis of marine food-chain, acts as a biological accumulator of iodides, selenium, (and n-3 fatty acids) :Antioxidant biochemical mechanism of
iodides
- 2 I− → I2 + 2 e− (electrons) = −0.54 Volt ;
- 2 I− + Peroxidase + H2O2 + 2 Tyrosine → 2 Iodo-Tyrosine + H2O + 2 e− (antioxidants);
- 2 e− + H2O2 + 2 H+ (of intracellular water-solution) → 2 H2O
- 2 I− + Peroxidase + H2O2 + 2 Tyrosine → 2 Iodo-Tyrosine + H2O + 2 e− (antioxidants);
Antioxidant biochemical mechanism of iodides,
probably one of the most ancient mechanisms of defense from
poisonous reactive oxygen species:
- 2 I− + Peroxidase + H2O2 + Tyrosine, Histidine, Lipids, Carbons -> Iodo-Compounds + H2O + 2 e− (antioxidants)
Iodo-Compounds: Iodo-Tyrosine, Iodo-Histidine,
Iodo-Lipids, Iodo-Carbons.
Clinical Use
Iodide (>6mg/day) can be used to treat
patients with hyperthyroidism due to
its ability to block the release of thyroid
hormone (TH), known as the Wolff-Chaikoff Effect, from the
thyroid
gland. In fact, prior to 1940, iodides were the
predominant antithyroid agents. In large doses, iodides inhibit
proteolysis of
thyroglobulin.
This permits TH to be synthesized and stored in colloid, but not released into
the bloodstream.
Of note, this treatment is seldom used today as a
stand-alone therapy despite the rapid improvement of patients
immediately following administration. The major disadvantage of
iodide treatment lies in the fact that excessive stores of TH
accumulate, slowing the onset of action of thioamides (TH synthesis
blockers). Additionally, the functionality of iodides fade after
the initial treatment period. An "escape from block" is also a
concern, as extra stored TH may spike following discontinuation of
treatment.
See also
References
iodide in German: Iodide
iodide in Estonian: Jodiidid
iodide in Spanish: Yoduro
iodide in French: Ion iodure
iodide in Dutch: Jodide
iodide in Japanese: ヨウ化物
iodide in Russian: Иодиды
iodide in Finnish: Jodidi
iodide in Turkish: İyodür
iodide in Chinese: 碘化物