1 / 64

Vitamins

Vitamins. Vitamins. Definition: vital dietary substances Not CHO, Protein, or Fat Necessary in very small quantities to do special metabolic jobs Help regulate body processes Especially B vitamins. Vitamins. Cannot be made by body in sufficient amounts Exception: Vitamin D

hypatia
Télécharger la présentation

Vitamins

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Vitamins

  2. Vitamins • Definition: vital dietary substances • Not CHO, Protein, or Fat • Necessary in very small quantities to do special metabolic jobs • Help regulate body processes • Especially B vitamins

  3. Vitamins • Cannot be made by body in sufficient amounts Exception: Vitamin D • Supplied by food • Most work by combining with protein to form co-enzymes • Natural vs. Synthetic • Rates of absorption different

  4. Vitamins • Provitamins • precursors to active vitamin • Antivitamins • antagonists • Avitaminosis • deficiency • Hypervitaminosis • too much

  5. Vitamins • Grouped by solubility. • Fat soluble I • A D E K • H20 soluble • B complexC • B12 folate • pantothenic acid • biotin

  6. Fat Soluble • Absorbed in lymphatic system • Deficiencies occur with fat malabsorption • Attached to protein carriers • Not excreted, stored if not needed • Can be toxic

  7. Water Soluble Vitamins • Absorbed directly through intestinal wall • Filtered by kidneys and excreted if excess • Tissues able to hold limited amounts • May be able to become toxic • Function as coenzymes for production of energy

  8. Vitamins • Megadose • more than 10 X RDA • Up to 35% of Americans take vitamin supplements • Food best source • Supplements needed when diet inadequate or during times of stress

  9. Vitamin A • Generic term for several compounds • retinal • retinol • retinaldehyde • retinoic acid

  10. Vitamin A • Preformed vitamin A = retinol • found only in animal sources or fortified foods • 6-12 months supply in body • stores deplete in infectious disease • major transport and storage form • retinol binding protein picks up retinol from liver, carries it in blood

  11. Vitamin A • Provitamin A • Beta carotene • Plant source • Supplies 2/3 Vitamin A necessary • Converted retinal retinol • Extremely effective antioxidant

  12. Maintains cornea Helps with light detection at retina Maintains integrity of epithelial cells Fights infection Supports normal bone and body growth Reproduction Cell development Vitamin A

  13. Vitamin A Deficiencies • Epithelial cells flatten and harden from production of keratin • Drying & hardening of cornea • xerosis • Xerophthalmia- • night blindness • hardening of cornea • complete blindness

  14. Vitamin A Deficiencies • Mucous linings harden • increased tendency for infection • Skin • Dry, rough, scaly “toad’s skin” • Follicular hyperkeratosis • Delayed sexual maturation/sterility

  15. Vitamin A Toxicity • Acne medication • can cause birth defects • Overdosing • can cause birth defects • joint pains • loss of hair • jaundice • death

  16. Vitamin A Sources • Liver • Fish Liver Oils • Whole and Fortified milk and dairy products • Dark green and yellow-orange vegetables

  17. Vitamin D • Made in body with help of ultraviolet rays • prohormone = calcitriol • Works in harmony with parathyroid hormone • withdraws Ca++ from bone to maintain Ca++ • calcitonin decreases bone withdrawal

  18. Vitamin D • Liver manufactures precursor • Migrates to skin-converted to #2 precursor with ultraviolet rays • Liver and kidney convert #2 to active vitamin • Absorption in small intestine • Requires presence of bile salts

  19. Vitamin D • Associated with Ca++ and Po4-3 metabolism • Promotes normal bone mineralization • Basic cell processes in brain & kidney, liver, skin, reproduction • Immune system

  20. Vitamin D Deficiencies • Bones fail to calcify • Rickets or osteomalacia can develop • Muscle spasms and pain • Repeated pregnancies and periods of lactation • Little sun exposure

  21. Vitamin D Toxicity • Stored in adipose tissue • Released slowly • Bone pain & weakness • Calcium deposits in heart or lungs • Increased serum calcium • Kidney stones • Most toxic of all vitamins

  22. Vitamin D Sources • Fortified milk • Fortified margarine • Fortified breakfast cereals • Small amounts in egg yolk, salmon, tuna fish

  23. Vitamin E • Generic name for 8 naturally occurring fat soluble nutrients called tocopherols • Absorbed with aid of pancreatic secretions and bile salts • Stored in adipose tissue

  24. Vitamin E • Great antioxidant • Neutralizes free radicals • Works with selenium to destroy cell peroxides • Protects lung from air pollutants • Protects RBC • Research on Vitamin E role in decreasing heart disease

  25. Vitamin E • Decreased # of sickle cells • Helps in cystic fibrosis • Benefit in boosting immune function and fighting Alzheimer’s

  26. Vitamin E Deficiencies • RBC break open • Erythrocyte hemolysis in premature infants (hemolytic anemia) • Affects vision • Neurology problems

  27. Vitamin E Toxicity • Interferes with blood clotting action of Vitamin K • leads to hemorrhage with anticoagulant drugs • MYTHS: • improves athletic skill • enhances sexual performance • prevents wrinkling or gray hair

  28. Vitamin E Sources • Vegetable oils • Milk • Eggs • Fish • Cereal grains

  29. Vitamin K • Phylloquinone • Essential for synthesis of 5 proteins involved in blood clotting • Involved with CA++ in bone development

  30. Vitamin K • Absorbed in small intestine • Needs bile salts for absorption • Stored in liver • Small amount-10 days supply • Can be synthesized in intestinal tract from dietary sources

  31. Vitamin K Deficiencies • Needed daily • Extended use of antibiotics • Malabsorption -defects in fat absorption • In sterile digestive tract in newborns • Hemorrhage Disease of newborns

  32. Vitamin K Toxicity • Red cell hemolysis • Jaundice • Brain damage

  33. Vitamin K Sources • Green leafy vegetables • Liver • Milk • Meats • Egg yolk

  34. Vitamin C • Absorbed from small intestine • ~ 3 months for deficiencies to appear • Antioxidant • Collagen, connective tissue • Removes Fe++ from ferritin, activates folate

  35. Vitamin C • Important in wound healing • Antihistamine effect • Depleted in • Infectious processes • Smokers • Burns • Surgery • How much to supplement unknown

  36. Vitamin C • Megadosing can cause hyperosmolar diarrhea • Rebound scurvy or rash when large doses stopped quickly • Fe++ overload

  37. Vitamin C • Supplemented in patients with • skin ulcers • along with vitamin C, vitamin A, zinc • spinal cord injuries • increase acid in urine

  38. Vitamin C Deficiencies • Scurvy- bleeding gums • Pinpoint hemorrhages under skin • Rough, brown scaly skin • Massive bleeding into joints,body cavities

  39. Vitamin C Sources • Citrus fruits • Potatoes • Broccoli • Tomatoes • Green peppers

  40. Vitamin B1 Thiamin • Combined with PO4 in jejunal mucosa • forms TPP • acts in process that converts • pyruvate to acetyl CoA energy

  41. Vitamin B1 Deficiencies • Anorexia • Severe constipation • Lower HCL acid secretion • General apathy & fatigue • Severe: beriberi • paralysis and cardiac failure • lower extremity edema • muscle pain

  42. Vitamin B1 • Give thiamin to ETOH abusers • Supplement in: • chronic illness • gestation • lactation • strange diets

  43. Vitamin B1 Sources • Lean meats • Liver • Whole or enriched grains

  44. Vitamin B2 Riboflavin • Facilitates energy production • 2 enzymes operate at vital reaction points of citric acid cycle • De-amination of A2 • Light sensitive, destroyed ultraviolet rays and fluorescent light

  45. Vitamin B2 Deficiencies • Tissue inflammation/breakdown • Delayed wound healing • Characteristic cracks at corners of mouth-cleilosis • Tongue becomes red swollen -glossitis • Eyes burn, itch, tear

  46. Vitamin B2 Deficiencies • Scaly, greasy skin-seborrheic dermatitis in skin folds • Supplement in GI diseases, pregnancy, and lactation

  47. Vitamin B2 Sources • Milk • Meat • Whole grain/enriched breads • Dark green leafy vegetables

  48. Niacin • Participates in energy metabolism • Small amount made from tryptophan • Active in citric acid cycle • Used in CVD to lower CHOL • Acts as vasodilator-causes skin flushing • Can injure liver

  49. Niacin Deficiencies • Weakness and anorexia • Skin eruptions • Dark scaly dermatitis • Severe-confusion, pellagra • 4 D’s = dermatitis, diarrhea, dementia, death

  50. Niacin Sources • Peanuts • Beans • Peas • Enriched grains

More Related