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Vitamin C, B1, B2 & B3
Vitamin C, B1, B2 & B3

The Role of Diet and Nutrition in Vision Care
The Role of Diet and Nutrition in Vision Care

... Sleep Deficiency or Excess 4 new studies show a strong link between sleep patterns and mental deterioration and Alzheimer's disease. Data on more than 15,000 women in the US Nurses' Health Study, suggested “that those who slept 5 hours a day or less or 9 hours a day or more, had lower average ...
The Big Six - Project Eat
The Big Six - Project Eat

...  One of you, student, picks a card and the teacher/student reads card. Ex. “All students who played outside yesterday stand up and walk to a new spot in the circle.”  If you have done the activity on the card that is called you must move your feet by walking to a new spot in the circle and sit dow ...
Apple Pistachio Crisp - Produce For Better Health Foundation
Apple Pistachio Crisp - Produce For Better Health Foundation

... Honeycrisp apples are sweet and crunchy, perfectly delicious raw, but also ideal in baking. And their sweetness lends potential to reduce added sugar, as we did with this apple crisp. ...
Living the Pain-Free Life
Living the Pain-Free Life

Vitamin C - Thea Pharmaceuticals
Vitamin C - Thea Pharmaceuticals

... (dehydroascorbic acid) is reduced to ascorbic acid during the transport into the humour in the presence of reduced Glutathione. The reduction of dehydroascorbic acid contributes to the retention of ascorbic acid in the lens(20). Cataracts (an age-related clouding of the lens in the eye that affects ...
brochure food design
brochure food design

... omega-6 fatty acids than omega-3 fatty acids. But omega-3 fatty acids are the ultimate anti-inflammatories. There are three different omega-3 fatty acids, only one of which is classed as essential as it cannot be produced by the body itself: alpha-linolenic acid (ALA). This acid is mainly found in l ...
Vemma - BASU
Vemma - BASU

... the cell in the process. Every day, your body’s cells are being bombarded by these unstable molecules. Without a strong nutritional foundation, your cells may be more susceptible to free-radical damage; this proprietary formula helps protect your body from the effects of aging.* Is it true that xant ...
Sports Drink vs. Chocolate Milk
Sports Drink vs. Chocolate Milk

... Vitamins and Minerals Calcium helps build and maintain strong bones and plays an important role in muscle contraction. Vitamin D helps promote the absorption of calcium and enhances bone mineralization. Milk is one of the few dietary sources of this important nutrient. Potassium regulates the body’ ...
Document
Document

Common food additive..
Common food additive..

... certain foods. Glutamate is a salt in proteincontaining foods. Also produced by the body for metabolism and brain function. The body can't distinguish between glutamate in food and glutamate in MSG. ...
Slide 1
Slide 1

NUTRIENT Ppt
NUTRIENT Ppt

... they are more resistant to spoilage (and more saturated)  Hydrogenation yields a new type of fat called transfatty acids  Olestra is a synthetic fat that cannot be digested, so it has no calories. People have had reaction to this product. ...
Notes
Notes

... An essential nutrient is a nutrient that the body cannot synthesize on its own or not to an adequate amount and must be provided by the diet. These nutrients are necessary for the body to function properly. The six ...
Unit 2 - Amazon Web Services
Unit 2 - Amazon Web Services

... that of glucose, they do not take long to digest. They are quickly converted into glucose and immediately absorbed by cells. As compared with complex carbohydrates, simple carbohydrates cause blood sugar levels to rise at a rapid rate. To control the effects of sugar in the blood, the body releases ...
Nutrition Glossary - School Nutrition and Fitness
Nutrition Glossary - School Nutrition and Fitness

... for example, help your body break food down into chemical compounds that can more easily be absorbed. Thousands of different enzymes are produced by your body. Essential Amino Acids: Essential Amino Acids are amino acids that your body does not have the ability to synthesize. Hundreds of different a ...
Nutrition - Paignton Online
Nutrition - Paignton Online

... Too much fat, particularly saturated fat, is bad for health, and no more than one third of our energy should come from fats. 12 of 29 ...
Healthy 4 Life Press Conference
Healthy 4 Life Press Conference

... • No restriction of refined carbohydrates in school lunches ...
Nutrition Notes - Swift Classroom
Nutrition Notes - Swift Classroom

... organs, skin hair, nails, and bones. Further, proteins are the key elements of the antibodies that protect us from disease, of enzymes that control chemical activities in the body and of hormones that regulate bodily functions. Each gram of protein yields about 4 calories of energy, similar to that ...
Essential amino acids
Essential amino acids

... the human gastrointestinal tract; however, the extent to which they can meet the body's needs is uncertain. Once the bacterial flora of the intestinal tract have been established, vitamin K is produced and is available to the body. ...
I. Why We Eat
I. Why We Eat

Tropical Fruits
Tropical Fruits

... yellow flesh with an unusually high amount of fat that is primarily monounsaturated. • More than 500 varieties of avocadoes are existing. • Avocados are loaded with nutrients such as dietary fiber, vitamin B6, vitamin C, vitamin E, potassium, magnesium, and folate. • The only fruit which much nutrie ...
Nutrition
Nutrition

... Malnutrition is a problem more common in underdeveloped nations than it is in America, yet there are people in the United States who suffer from nutritional deficits. Here is a look at some of the more well-known deficiencies: The most common nutritional deficiency in the world is Iron Deficiency An ...
Vitamin B5 ( Pantothenic Acid)
Vitamin B5 ( Pantothenic Acid)

... fatty acids as well as the essential fatty acid metabolism such as conversion of linoleic acid to various eicosanoids). 3. Amino acid metabolism (breakdown of amino acids, such as threonine, isoleucine, and methionine, for use as energy). 4. Cell division and growth (Biotin plays an important role i ...
Canine Nutrition:
Canine Nutrition:

... The only exception to this is that AAFCO does allow for certain synthetic vitamins and mineral additives to these dog foods (but no synthetic preservatives). ...
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Vitamin



A vitamin (US /ˈvaɪtəmɪn/ and UK /ˈvɪtəmɪn/) is an organic compound and a vital nutrient that an organism requires in limited amounts. An organic chemical compound (or related set of compounds) is called a vitamin when the organism cannot synthesize the compound in sufficient quantities, and it must be obtained through the diet; thus, the term ""vitamin"" is conditional upon the circumstances and the particular organism. For example, ascorbic acid (one form of vitamin C) is a vitamin for humans, but not for most other animal organisms. Supplementation is important for the treatment of certain health problems, but there is little evidence of nutritional benefit when used by otherwise healthy people.By convention, the term vitamin includes neither other essential nutrients, such as dietary minerals, essential fatty acids, or essential amino acids (which are needed in greater amounts than vitamins) nor the great number of other nutrients that promote health, and are required less often to maintain the health of the organism. Thirteen vitamins are universally recognized at present. Vitamins are classified by their biological and chemical activity, not their structure. Thus, each ""vitamin"" refers to a number of vitamer compounds that all show the biological activity associated with a particular vitamin. Such a set of chemicals is grouped under an alphabetized vitamin ""generic descriptor"" title, such as ""vitamin A"", which includes the compounds retinal, retinol, and four known carotenoids. Vitamers by definition are convertible to the active form of the vitamin in the body, and are sometimes inter-convertible to one another, as well.Vitamins have diverse biochemical functions. Some, such as vitamin D, have hormone-like functions as regulators of mineral metabolism, or regulators of cell and tissue growth and differentiation (such as some forms of vitamin A). Others function as antioxidants (e.g., vitamin E and sometimes vitamin C). The largest number of vitamins, the B complex vitamins, function as precursors for enzyme cofactors, that help enzymes in their work as catalysts in metabolism. In this role, vitamins may be tightly bound to enzymes as part of prosthetic groups: For example, biotin is part of enzymes involved in making fatty acids. They may also be less tightly bound to enzyme catalysts as coenzymes, detachable molecules that function to carry chemical groups or electrons between molecules. For example, folic acid may carry methyl, formyl, and methylene groups in the cell. Although these roles in assisting enzyme-substrate reactions are vitamins' best-known function, the other vitamin functions are equally important.Until the mid-1930s, when the first commercial yeast-extract vitamin B complex and semi-synthetic vitamin C supplement tablets were sold, vitamins were obtained solely through food intake, and changes in diet (which, for example, could occur during a particular growing season) usually greatly altered the types and amounts of vitamins ingested. However, vitamins have been produced as commodity chemicals and made widely available as inexpensive semisynthetic and synthetic-source multivitamin dietary and food supplements and additives, since the middle of the 20th century. Study of structural activity, function and their role in maintaining health is called as vitaminology.
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