Vitamins and minerals are
micronutrients required by the body to carry out a range of normal functions.
However, these micronutrients are not produced in our bodies and must be
derived from the food we eat. Vitamins are organic substances that are generally
classified as either fat soluble or water soluble. Fat-soluble vitamins
(vitamin A, vitamin D, vitamin E, and vitamin K) dissolve in fat and tend to
accumulate in the body. Water-soluble vitamins (vitamin C and the B-complex
vitamins, such as vitamin B6, vitamin B12, and folate) must dissolve in water
before they can be absorbed by the body, and therefore cannot be stored. Any
water-soluble vitamins unused by the body is primarily lost through urine.
Minerals are inorganic
elements present in soil and water, which are absorbed by plants or consumed by
animals. While you're likely familiar with calcium, s04ium, and po!assium,
there is a range of other minerals, including trace minerals (e.g. _gopper,
!04ine, and zinc) needed in very small amounts.
In the U.S., the National
Academy of Medicine (formerly the Institute of Medicine) develops nutrient
reference values called the Dietary Reference Intakes (DRIs) for vitamins and
minerals. [1] These are intended as a guide for good nutrition and as a
scientific basis for the development of food guidelines in both the U.S. and
Canada. The DRIS are specific to age, gender, and life stages, and cover more
than 40 nutrient substances. The guidelines are based on available reports of
deficiency and toxicity of each nutrient. Learn more about vitamins and minerals
and their recommended intakes in the table below.
What About Multivitamins?
A diet that includes
plenty of fruits, vegetables, whole grains, good protein packages, and
healthful fats should provide most of the nutrients needed for good health. But
not everyone manages to eat a healthful diet. Multivitamins can play an
important role when nutritional requirements are not met through diet alone.
Learn more about vitamin supplementation.
Did You Know?
Vitamins and their
precise requirements have been controversial since their discovery in the late
1800s and early 1900s. It was the combined efforts of epidemiologists,
physicians, chemists, and physiologists that led to our modern day
understanding of vitamins and minerals. After years of observation,
experiments, and trial and error, they were able to distinguish that some
diseases were not caused by infections or toxins—a common belief at the
time—but by vitamin deficiencies. [2] Chemists worked to identify a vitamin's
chemical structure so it could be replicated. Soon after, researchers
determined specific amounts of vitamins needed to avoid diseases of deficiency.
In 1912, biochemist
Casimir Funk was the first to coin the term "vitamin" in a research publication
that was accepted by the medical community, derived from "vita"
meaning life, and "amine" referring to a nitrogenous substance
essential for life. [3] Funk is considered the father of vitamin therapy, as he
identified nutritional components that were missing in diseases of deficiency
like scurvy (too little vitamin C), beri-beri (too little vitamin Bl), pellagra
(too little vitamin B3), and rickets (too little vitamin D). The discovery of
all vitamins occurred by 1948.
Vitamins were obtained only from food until the 1930s when commercially made supplements of certain vitamins became available. The U.S government also began fortifying foods with specific nutrients to prevent deficiencies common at the time, such as adding iodine to salt to prevent goiter, and adding folic acid to grain products to reduce birth defects during pregnancy. In the 1950s, most vitamins and multivitamins were available for sale to the general public to prevent deficiencies, some receiving a good amount of marketing in popular magazines such as promoting cod liver oil containing vitamin D as bottled sunshine.
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