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Vitamins and minerals Learning objectives Understand why V/M are essential to healthy living; Understand that there are healthy intake levels for V/M.

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Presentation on theme: "Vitamins and minerals Learning objectives Understand why V/M are essential to healthy living; Understand that there are healthy intake levels for V/M."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Vitamins and minerals Learning objectives Understand why V/M are essential to healthy living; Understand that there are healthy intake levels for V/M and that excesses may be worse than deficiencies; Know the four fat soluble vitamins and basic roles; Know the water soluble vitamins we discuss in class and their roles; Know the roles of the minerals we discuss in class; Know that processing and storage may affect some vitamins more than others. What is wrong with “If a little is good, more must be better”?

3 Fat soluble vitamins ADEK Dissolve in organic solvents – methanol, gasoline etc.. Can build up because they are not excreted Absorbed during fat absorption Transported in lipoproteins Vitamin A – carotenoids and retinoids Vitamin D – cholesterol product Vitamin E – tocopherols Vitamin K – menaquinones and phylloquinones

4 Vitamins Essential organic substances Yield no energy, but facilitate energy-yielding chemical reactions If absent from a diet, it will produce deficiency signs and symptoms Preservation of vitamins in foods exposure to light, heat, air, water, and alkaline

5 Vitamin A Two general types Pre-formed retinoids are found in animal products Precursors carotenoids are found in plant products beta carotene, lutein, lycopene, others must be converted to retinoids absorbed and converted by intestinal cells

6 Absorption of Vitamin A Requires bile, digestive enzymes, integration into micelles Dependent on the fat in the diet olestra 90% of retinoids can be absorbed Only ~3% of carotenoids are absorbed so eat your carrots Intestinal cells can convert carotenoids to retinoids

7 Transport in body/storage Liver stores 90% of vitamin A in the body polar bear liver Reserve is adequate for several months Transported via chylomicrons to the liver Transported from the liver as retinol via retinol-binding protein to target tissue Carotenoids can be transported via VLDL

8 Functions of Vitamin A Night and color vision xerophthalmia Cell health and maintenance epithelial cell differentiation and division cells deteriorate without Vit A follicular hyperkeratosis Antioxidant Macular Degeneration lutein

9 The vision cycle

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11 Sources of Vitamin A Retinoids - animals Liver, fish oils, fortified milk, eggs 50% of vitamin A intake is from these sources Carotenoids - plants dark green leafy yellow orange the other 50%

12 Overdose of a Vitamin? High doses of vitamin A are toxic HYPERVITAMINOSIS A 3 – 10x supplements Teratogenic – birth defects/spontaneous abortion 3x RDA Carcinogenic – some feeding trials with smokers 3 – 10x RDA Fatal dose – 12 gram

13 How much do we need? International unit (IU)-crude method of measurement Retinol activity equivalent (RAE) -current, more precise method of measurement 1 ug of retinol = 1 RAE = 3.3 IU =12 ug beta-carotene = 24 ug of other provitamin A RDA 900 REA men 700 REA women Supplement or no?


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