notes/education/nutrition/Vitamins.md
2024-11-01 17:38:05 -06:00

7.1 KiB

Vitamins were first discovered in 1921

  • Casamir Runk coined the term vitamin
    • Vita = life
    • Amine = a type of nitrogen containing substance
    • The first discovered vitamin was thiamin
  • There are 13 known vitamins, plus 5 vitamin like substances
  • It is unlikely that any new vitamins will be discovered - (babies and sick people can live on synthetic liquid diet?)
  • A vitamin is a complex organic compound that regulates certain metabolic processes
    • Cannot be synthesized in sufficient quantities by the body
    • Occurs naturally in foods
    • Deficiency disorder occurs if substance is missing from the body
    • They do not provide any energy
  • Vitamins are organic, but they differ from macronutrients:
    • Not metabolized for energy
    • Present in small amounts in foods
    • Required in milligram and microgram amounts
  • Because vitamins are organic
    • They are subject to heat degradation
    • Exposure to excessive heat, alkaline substances, light, and air can destroy certain vitamins
    • Water soluble vitamins can leach out of food and dissolve in cooking water

Fat Soluble Vitamins

  • Fat soluble vitamins are K, A, D, E
    • Found in lipid portions of the body
    • Associate with lipids in the body
    • **Digested and absorbed with fats
    • Stored in the body
    • Can cause toxicity
Nutrient Function Deficiency Toxicity Sources Other Info
Vitamin A (Retinol) - Vision (Retina + Cornea)
- Growth and Reproduction
- Immune Function
- Epithelial (Skin)
- Cells
- Bone
- Remodeling
- Night Blindness (Nycatlopia)
- Xerophthalmia
- Dry Eyes -> Blindness
- Poor Growth
- Dry Skin or Tissue
- ^ Causes increased risk of infection
- Carotenemia (Orange colored skin)
- Birth defects
- Bone fractures
- Liver damage
- Nausea / Vomiting
- Vegetables: Yellow, orange, or dark green (pumpkin, squash, carrots, spinach)
- Milk and Dairy Products
- Retinol's precursor is beta-carotene (antioxidant)
- Helps with wound healing
Vitamin D (Calciferol) - Calcium Absorption
- Bone Strength
- Blood Calcium Levels
- Supports Immune Function
- Reduces Inflammation
- Rickets (children)
- Osteomalacia (Adults)
- Osteoporosis (Elderly)
- Decreased immune function
- Decreased growth
- Hypercalcemia (Calcium deposits in soft tissue, Weakness, Nausea/Vomiting)
- Kidney Stones
- Milk and Dairy Products
- Fish (Salmon, Tuna)
- Breakfast Cereals
- Sunlight or UV Light
- Often referred to as the sunshine vitamin
- Acts as a hormone (interacts with para-thyroid hormone and calcitonin)
Vitamin E (Tocopherol) - Antioxidant
- Wound healing
- Cell Membranes
- Supports immune function
- Hemolysis of red blood cells
- Anemia
- Reduced muscular coordination
Supplements can interfere with vitamin K metabolism and cause uncontrolled bleeding - Vegetable oils
- Nuts or Seeds
- Wheat germ
- Green leafy veggies
- Breakfast Cereals
- Doesn't increase sexual performance, prevent aging, or cure Parkinson's disease (despite claims)
Vitamin K (Phylloquinone) - Blood clotting
- Bone health
- Hemorrhaging or Hemorrhagic Disease (Excessive bleeding or internal bleeding)
- Increased risk of hip failure
Not common - Green leafy veggies (spinach, kale, et cetera)
- Beans and soybeans
- Vegetable Oils
- Healthy GI tract
- 50% of needed amount can be synthesized in the GI tract
- Babies are given a shot at birth
- Interacts with blood clotting meds (coumadin or warfarin)

Water soluble vitamins

  • Water soluble vitamins are the B-vitamins: thiamin, riboflavin, niacin, vitamin B-6, pantothenic acid, folate, biotin, vitamin B-12, and vitamin C.
    • They dissolve in water
    • Very limited amounts are stored with the exception of B-12
    • Kidneys will filter out excess water soluble vitamins
    • Less likely to be toxic

Oxidization

  • An oxidizing agent is a substance that removes electrons from atoms or molecules
  • A free radical is a substance (C, H, O) with an unpaired electron
    • Highly reactive, damages and destroys molecules
  • Antioxidants (Vitamin E, C) are substances that give up electrons to free radicals to protect cells

Vitamin Intake

Bioavailability is the amount of a vitamin available for use in the body

  • Factors that affect how available a vitamin is include:
    • How long it takes the vitamin to pass through the intestinal tract
    • Certain health conditions that affect the absorption of facts
    • By cooking with a little bit of fat, you better absorb fat soluble vitamins from that meal.
  • Natural sources of vitamins typically provide higher availability It's important to preserve the vitamin content of food, ways to do so include:
  • Avoid decaying, wilting, or bruised fruits or vegetables
  • Fresh produce should refrigerated at high humidity, away from the open air
  • Exposure to excessive heat, alkaline (salty) substances, light, and air can all reduce the vitamin content of food
  • Vegetables should be cooked in small amounts of water, using quick cook methods