Kin 110 Lecture 6 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Kin 110 Lecture 6

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Kin 110 Lecture 6 Vitamins Ch. 7 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Kin 110 Lecture 6


1
Kin 110 Lecture 6
  • Vitamins Ch. 7

2
Vitamins
  • Vitamin essential organic (contains carbon)
    substances needed in small amounts in diet
  • Normal function, growth, maintenance of body
  • Yield no energy, but participate in energy
    yielding reactions
  • ADEK fat soluble
  • B vitamins and C water soluble
  • B vit. And Vit K co-enzymes help enzymes
    function
  • Fig. 7-1

3
Vitamins
  • To be classified as vitamin
  • Body unable to synthesize enough
  • Absence for a defined period of time must produce
    deficiency
  • symptoms, if caught in time, are cured when
    substance is reintroduced to diet
  • Have they all been found?
  • People living on intravenous solutions of
    Protein, Carbohydrates, Fat and all known
    vitamins and minerals survive, grow, reproduce
    and fight disease

4
Storage of Vitamins
  • Fat soluble vitamins A and D not readily excreted
  • Water soluble - lost from body quite rapidly
    (B12 stored)
  • Limited storage should be consumed daily

5
Vitamin Toxicity
  • Toxicity theoretical for all vitamins
  • Fat soluble more frequently observed (A and D)
  • E, Niacin, B-6 and C very large amounts -
    toxicity
  • Only possible from supplements
  • A and D 3-5 times daily need
  • A important to minimize in early pregnancy
  • Once a day vitamins, less than 2 times daily
    value not a risk
  • Consult physician as medications can be
    counteracted

6
Fat soluble Vitamins
  • ADEK
  • Absorbed along with dietary fat
  • Travel in bloodstream along with fat to reach
    body cells
  • Stored in liver and fatty tissue
  • 40-90 of fat sol. vit. absorbed
  • Can be reduced further interference in normal
    digestion and absorption of fats.
  • Eg. Mineral oil laxatives

7
Vitamin A
  • Easy to over dose (toxic) and be deficient
  • Both cause sever problems
  • Variety of forms
  • Eg. Retinol
  • Preformed vitamin A retinoids
  • animal foods
  • Carotenoids pro-vitamin A
  • plants
  • Yellow-orange pigment in carrots
  • Turned into vitamin A as needed
  • Most potent beta-carotene
  • Both pre and pro referred to as VitaminA

8
Functions of Vitamin A
  • Many roles not all well understood
  • Role in vision best known and most clearly
    understood
  • Performs important functions is both light (day)
    and dark (night) vision
  • in dim light, one form of A is required to start
    the chemical process that signals the brain that
    light is striking the eye.
  • Without A night blindness
  • Prolonged deficiency cells unable to produce
    mucus
  • Dry, dirty, scratched, infected
  • Xeropthalmia
  • Less-developed nations children
  • Blindness. Infection, death

9
Health of Cells
  • Vitamin A maintains health of all cells that
    line internal and external surfaces
  • Lungs, intestines, stomach, eyes, skin
    (epithelial cells)
  • Cells secrete mucus lubricant
  • Without A decrease activity of immune cells,
    increased infection
  • Needed for growth, Development and Reproduction
  • Synthesis of proteins that stimulate proper
    growth and ddevelopment
  • Resorption and production of bone

10
Cancer and Vitamin A
  • Skin, lung, bladder and breast cancer
  • Adequate intake of vitamin A can lower risk of
    breast cancer
  • Mega dose NOT recommended
  • Carotenoids trap energy in free radicals
    oxidation can initiate cancer process
  • Supplements of B-carotene not effective
  • Variety of fresh fruits and vegetables
  • Acne topical and internal derivatives
  • Birth defects in pregnant women

11
Vitamin A in Food
  • Preformed
  • liver, fish oils, fortified milk and cereal,
    butter, margarine, eggs
  • Pro-vitamin dark green and orange vegetables
  • Carrots, spinach, winter squash, papaya, apricots
  • RDA RE- retinol equivalent
  • 1000 RE (males)
  • 800 RE (females)
  • Risk of deficiency children, poor, alcoholics
  • Dietary sources table p. 214

12
Toxicity of Vitamin A
  • 3 times the RDA can cause problems if continued
    for prolonged periods
  • Early pregnancy (preformed)
  • Fetal malformations, birth defects, spontaneous
    abortion
  • Non-pregnant skin, hair, internal organs and
    CNS
  • Permanent damage can occur
  • Vit A is stored for months
  • Women in childbearing years limit to 100
    intake
  • Carotenoids(pro) not toxic
  • Rate of conversion is slow
  • Efficiency of absorption decreases as intake
    increases

13
Vitamin D
  • Also considered a hormone
  • skin cells convert cholesterol like substance
    into vitamin D using sunlight
  • effects kidney and bone
  • 10-15 minutes of exposure of arms, face and
    hands 2-3 times per week
  • not effective in winter
  • must have vitamin intake

14
Functions of Vitamin D
  • To become active hormone, vitamin D must be
    activated in liver and kidneys
  • calcitrol - active form
  • regulates calcium and bone metabolism along with
    parathyroid hormone
  • regulates absorption of calcium and phosphate
    from intestines
  • reduces kidney excretion of calcium
  • regulates deposition of calcium in bones
  • Cancer cells influenced by vitamin D

15
Vitamin D and Bone
  • Calcium and phosphorus deposition
  • without vit D bones weaken and bow under pressure
  • Rickets (children)
  • fortification of milk -
  • malabsorption of fat (cystic fibrosis)
  • osteomalacia - adults - soft bones
  • calcium withdrawn from bones
  • inefficient absorption or conservation
  • vit d deficient
  • bones porous and weak - break easily
  • supplement vit D - reduce fractures
  • problem with vitamin D activation or absorption

16
Dietary Sources of D
  • Fatty fish (sardines, salmon), fortified milk and
    cereal
  • under 51 years - 5 ug/day
  • over 51 2-3 times -10-15 ug/day
  • max. 200 ug /day
  • Young, fair skined 10-15 min 2-3 times /week
  • 5-10 times recommended on regular basis -
    toxicity
  • calcium overabsorptoin - deposition in kidneys
    and other organs
  • high bld calcium
  • weakness loss of appetite, diarrhea, vomiting ,
    mental confusion,
  • sun exposure does not result in toxicity

17
Vitamin E
  • Fat soluble antioxidant -
  • resides in cell membranes
  • donates electrons - protection from free radicals
  • fig 7-3 p 217
  • DNA oxidation - cancer, cell death
  • repair mechanisms for damage
  • impact on cancer, heart disease very minimal
    compared to proper diet and exercise
  • not an alternative

18
Deficiency of vitamin E
  • Cell membranes break down
  • red blood cells in infants
  • unsaturated fatty acids susceptible to oxidation
  • hemolysis- breaking of rbc in absence of vit. E
  • vit E improves vit A absorption
  • used to metabolize iron in cell, maintain nervous
    tissue, and insulin function

19
Vitamin E in Foods
  • plant oils, fortified cereals, fruits and veg,
    eggs, margarine
  • vitamin E in plant oils - protects unsaturated
    fatty acids
  • animals almost no vitamin E
  • content of E depends on harvesting , processing
    storage and cooking
  • easily destroyed by oxygen, metals , light ,
    repeated frying
  • RNI - 8-10 mg /day
  • alpha tocopherol - most active form
  • smoking destroys vitamin E
  • megadose therapy - not proven
  • toxicity not a problem, except with
    anticoagulants (cardiovascular disease)

20
Vitamin K
  • Plants, fish oils, and meats
  • synthesized by bacteria in intestine
  • role - vital for blood clotting
  • synthesis of blood clotting factors
  • formation of proteins in bone, kidney and muscle
  • impart calcium binding potential
  • newborns lack bacteria to produce vitamin K
  • routine injection at birth
  • deficiency in adults on prolonged antibiotics or
    wit fat malabsorption

21
Vitamin K in Food
  • Liver, green leafy vegetables, broccoli, peas and
    green beans
  • vitamin K not stored well - one day
  • abundant in diet, deficiency uncommon
  • resistant to cooking
  • RDA - 60 - 80 mg / day
  • no risk of toxicity
  • risk of reduced effectiveness of medications to
    reduce blood clotting (CV disease)

22
Vitamin Supplements
  • Supplements may be beneficial, and improve health
    of population
  • folate (B vitamin)
  • birth defects
  • homocystien - risk factor for heart disease
  • alleviated by adequate folate (and reduction in
    red meat)
  • over 50 - vitamin B12 (synthetic)
  • easily absorbed
  • Eat right and take a multivitamin
  • Table 7-2
  • Supplements in consultation with physician

23
Vitamin Supplements
  • Megadoses of E and B12
  • trials ongoing, may be beneficial
  • Supplements should be taken with or just after
    meal
  • no more than 100 of daily values
  • avoid excess selenium and C
  • overabsorption of iron
  • males avoid excess iron
  • excess zinc - inhibits iron an copper absorption
  • excess folate - masks b12 deficiency
  • avoid other products - PABA, inositol, bee
    pollen, lecithin
  • Table 7-3, p 224
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