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Sue Stanley
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Vitamins & Minerals

 

VITAMINS & MINERALS

The following information is based on the Nutrient Reference Values for Australia and New Zealand Including Recommended Dietary Intakes. Specific advice for individual needs should be sought from a qualified dietician.

 

Nutrient (Vitamins)
 Needed for
 Key sources

Vitamin A

  • maintaining normal reproduction
  • good vision
  • formation and maintenance of healthy skin, teeth and soft tissues of the body
  • immune function (has anti-oxidant properties).

Milk, cheese, eggs, fatty fish, yellow-orange vegetables and fruits such as carrots, pumpkin, mango, apricots, and other vegetables such as spinach, broccoli.

Vitamin B1 (Thiamine)

  • supplying energy to tissues
  • breaking down and using the energy and nutrients in carbohydrates, proteins and fats
  • nerve function

Fortified breakfast cereals, baking flour, wholegrains, wheatgerm, yeast, legumes, nuts, pork.

Vitamin B2 (Riboflavin)

  • obtaining energy from food
  • making Vitamin B6 active in the body
  • reducing a key cardiovascular risk factor
  • production of red blood cells and body growth

Milk, cheese, yoghurt, fortified breads and breakfast cereals.

Vitamin B3 (Niacin)

  • obtaining energy from food
  • breaking down and using carbohydrates, proteins and fats and their building blocks
  • maintaining healthy skin and nerves
  • releasing calcium from cellular stores

Beef, pork, liver, beans, wholegrain cereals, eggs, cow’s milk.

Pantothenic acid

  • making, hormones, vitamin A and D and substances that help make nerves work
  • helps make new fats and proteins in the body

Chicken, beef, potatoes, oat-based cereals, tomatoes, egg yolks, whole grains.

Vitamin B6 (Pyridoxine)

  • breaking down, using and reforming the building blocks of proteins

Muscle and organ meats, fortified breakfast cereals, brussel sprouts, green peas, beans, split peas, and fruit.

Vitamin B12 (Cyano-cobalamin)

  • normal nerve function
  • normal blood function

Beef, lamb, fish, veal, chicken, eggs, milk and other dairy products.

Folate

  • breaking down and using the building blocks of proteins
  • the processes of tissue growth and cell function
  • maintaining good heart health
  • preventing neural tube defects in newborns

Cereals, cereal products, vegetables e.g. broccoli, legumes and fruit e.g. oranges.

Biotin

  • breaking down and using the building blocks of fats and proteins

Meats and cereals.

Note: eating raw egg whites prevents absorption of biotin.

Choline

  • making nerve cell transmitters and cell membranes
  • inflammatory and allergic response
  • healthy kidneys and liver
  • reducing the risk of heart disease
  • fat and cholesterol transport and break down in the body

Milk, eggs, peanuts, wheat germ, dried soybeans.

Vitamin C (Ascorbic acid)

  • protects against oxidative damage
  • aiding absorption of iron and copper
  • formation of collagen
  • healthy bones
  • helps fight infection
  • helps regenerate and stabilise other vitamins such as vitamin E or folate

Blackcurrants, orange, grapefruit, guava, kiwi fruit, raspberries, sweet peppers (Capsicum), broccoli, sprouts.

Vitamin D

  • absorption of calcium and phosphorus
  • maintenance of calcium levels in blood
  • immune function
  • healthy skin
  • muscle strength

Sunlight on skin allows the body to produce Vitamin D. Few foods contain significant amounts however main dietary sources are fortified margarine, salmon, herring, mackerel, and eggs.

Vitamin E (Tocopherol)

  • acts as antioxidant particularly for fats
  • keeping heart, circulation, skin and nervous system in good condition

Oils and margarines, fats of meats, chicken, fish, wheat germ, spinach, cashews, peanuts, almonds, sunflower seeds.

Vitamin K (phylloquinone)

  • normal blood clotting

Spinach, salad greens, cabbage, broccoli, brussel sprouts, soybean oil, canola oil, margarines

Calcium

  • development and maintenance of bones and teeth
  • good functioning muscles and nerves
  • heart function

Milk, cheese, yoghurt, bony fish, legumes, fortified soy beverages and fortified breakfast cereals.

Note: the body excretes calcium with salt in urine, so eat less salt to retain your calcium.

Chromium

  • enhancing the action of insulin to regulate blood sugar

Widely found in foods such as yeast, eggs, meat, whole grains, cheese.

Copper

  • the functioning of several enzymes
  • formation of connective tissue
  • iron metabolism and blood cell formation
  • nervous system, immune system and cardiovascular system function

Organ meats, seafood, nuts, seeds, wheat bran cereals, whole grains.

Fluoride

  • healthy teeth and bones

Fluoridated water, fish, tea.

Iodine

  • normal thyroid function (important in the growth and development of central nervous system)
  • energy production
  • oxygen consumption in cells

Salt water fish, shellfish, seaweed, iodised salt, vegetables (if there is iodine in the soil where they are grown).

Note: Severe deficiencies can cause miscarriage, stillbirth, infant mortality, congenital abnormalities etc.

Iron

  • Haemoglobin in red blood cells (important for transport of oxygen to tissues)
  • component of myoglobin (muscle protein)

Red meats – beef, lamb, veal, pork, fish, chicken and wholegrain cereals.

Note: Iron absorption from plant sources eg cereals or green leafy vegetables is much lower than from animal sources so 80% more is required in the food to get the same amount absorbed. Vitamin C helps with absorption.

Magnesium

  • the functioning of more than 300 enzyme systems
  • energy production
  • regulating potassium levels
  • the use of calcium
  • healthy bones

Green vegetables, legumes, peas, beans, lentils, nuts, wholegrains and cereals

Manganese

  • healthy bones
  • carbohydrate, cholesterol and protein metabolism

Cereal products, tea, vegetables.

Molybdenum

  • breakdown of proteins

Legumes, wholegrain products, nuts.

Phosphorus

  • forms part of DNA and RNA
  • buffers the acidity of urine
  • protection of acid/base balance of blood
  • storage and transport of energy
  • helps activate some proteins

Widely distributed in natural foods eg dairy, meat, dried fruit, eggs, cereals.

Potassium

  • nerve impulses
  • muscle contraction
  • regulates blood pressure

Leafy green vegetables, tomatoes, cucumbers, zucchini, eggplant, pumpkin, root vegetables. Also moderately abundant in beans, peas, bananas, avocados, milk, yoghurt  

Note: Potassium has a beneficial effect in offsetting the effects of sodium (salt) on blood pressure.

Selenium

  • antioxidant
  • thyroid metabolism
  • part of several functional proteins in body

Seafood, poultry, eggs and to a lesser extent other muscle meats and cereal foods (content varies widely with soil condition).

Sodium

  • maintain water balance throughout the body
  • nerve impulses
  • transport of molecules across cell walls

Found in most take-away and processed foods e.g. bread, butter, margarine, deli meats, cheese, cereals.

It is also a major component of table salt and baking soda

Note: It is important to use only moderate amounts of salt as recommended in the Dietary Guidelines.

Zinc

  • component of enzymes that help maintain structure of proteins and regulate gene expression
  • needed for growth, immunity appetite and skin integrity

Meats, fish, poultry, cereals, dairy foods.

Note: availability from animal sources is greater than that from plant sources so vegetarians need 50% higher intakes.

 

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