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Vitamin
E – Just the Facts, Ma’am |
by:
hamoon |
It
is important to understand that we are ultimately
responsible for our own well-being and should
do whatever is necessary to maintain our
health and assist our bodies in resisting
and fighting disease. Since health practitioners
agree that vitamins are essential for life
and health, we must ensure that we receive
adequate amounts for our bodies to function
properly and to protect us from illnesses.
Vitamin E is one of the vitamins to which
we should pay particular attention.
A vitamin is an organic substance essential
for life that regulates metabolism and assists
the processes that release energy from digested
food. Vitamin E, discovered in the mid-twentieth
century, assists in strengthening our immune
systems and helps protect us from a variety
of problems as well as several serious illnesses.
This vitamin can be obtained from food or
supplements.
There are two kinds of vitamins and both
are needed by the body. Vitamin E, like
vitamins A, D, and K, is a fat-soluble vitamin
that can be stored within the body in fatty
tissue. Vitamin B complex and vitamin C
are water-soluble vitamins that cannot be
stored and the excess amounts are excreted
in the urine. Fat-soluble vitamins – with
the exception of vitamin A – are measured
in international units (IUs), and studies
by the U.S. government’s National Institute
on Aging have shown that at least 200 IUs
daily of vitamin E are needed to garner
any significant benefits from taking this
vitamin.
How Does It Help?
• Vitamin E is a powerful antioxidant that
protects tissue against free radicals. Free
radicals are unstable molecules that usually
contain oxygen and can interaction with
DNA and other molecules leading to an impaired
cell function. Vitamin E, one of the chemical
compounds that prevents oxygen from reacting
with other compounds, neutralizes free radicals,
and is, therefore, one of the body’s natural
defenses against cancer and cardiovascular
disease.
• Vitamin E is also important in the formation
of red blood cells and helps the body use
vitamin K. Vitamin E improves circulation,
is necessary in the repair of tissue, promotes
normal blood clotting and healing, and can
reduce scarring, too.
• Women find it useful in the treatment
of premenstrual syndrome and fibrocystic
disease of the breast.
• Older adults take it to help reduce blood
pressure, relax leg cramps, help prevent
cataracts, and, perhaps, to assist in reducing
age spots.
• Vitamin E also helps prevent anemia, maintains
healthy nerves and muscles, and promotes
healthy skin and hair.
Where Do We Find It?
Food sources of vitamin E are nuts (e.g.,
almonds), sunflower seeds, cold pressed
vegetable oils, whole grains (e.g., wheat
germ), olives, legumes, and dark and leafy
vegetable (e.g., asparagus and spinach).
There are also significant quantities of
this vitamin in such foods as brown rice,
cornmeal, eggs, kelp, milk, and organ meats.
Some herb vitamin E sources are alfalfa,
bladderwrack, dandelion, flax, nettle, and
rose hips.
Vitamin E, like all other vitamins, is not
only available from food sources, but also
as a supplement. It can be purchased in
the form of a tablet, a capsule, or a liquid,
and as a powder that can be mixed with water
or juice or added to gels or bars. It can
also be administered by injection. Read
labels carefully so that you purchase only
those supplements that have been extracted
from a natural food source and have no harmful
additives included. A proper balance of
vitamins are needed in the body because
they work in synergy, or cooperative action,
and high doses of one vitamin can induce
a depletion of another. You can take vitamin
E safely in a one a day multivitamin, or
as single vitamin supplement if you wish
to take an amount higher than is included
in a multivitamin. Visit a vitamin store
and watch for the opportunity to purchase
your vitamins at a discount.
How Much Do We Need?
The amount of vitamin E you need depends
on your age, your weight, and the problems
you are trying to solve or prevent. Remember
that supplements should be taken daily,
and should be taken with food so that you
will receive other nutrients to assist in
their assimilation. Keep your supplements
in a cool, dark place to protect their potency,
and take them as part of your mealtime routine:
• To maintain good health, you should take
a minimum amount of 200 IUs daily.
• To help lower raised cholesterol levels,
especially in young adults, take 300 to
600 IUs daily.
• For reducing menopausal symptoms, take
400 IUs daily.
• To help combat coronary artery disease
and poor circulation, take 400 IUs daily.
Be Careful:
It is important to understand the different
functions of vitamins if you are going to
ingest them separately instead of within
a multivitamin where the formulation will
ensure a proper balance. In the case of
vitamin E, there are a variety of concerns
of which you should be aware:
• Vitamin E should be taken under medical
supervision if you are also taking blood-thinning
drugs (anticoagulant medication). Vitamin
E acts as a blood thinner, too.
• Remember that vitamin E is a fat-soluble
vitamin, and since it will be stored in
the body in fatty tissue, it can reach toxic
levels. People who decide to take mega-doses
of vitamins and don’t know what they’re
doing can suffer from too much of a good
thing with this vitamin. If you are taking
a multivitamin supplement and a separate
vitamin E supplement, make sure you are
not taking a toxic dose. Anything over 1200
IUs should not be taken without consulting
a health professional.
• Be careful if you take iron as well as
vitamin E. These two supplements should
be taken at different times of the day because
iron in the form of ferrous sulfate will
destroy vitamin E. Organic forms of iron
such as ferrous gluconate or ferrous fumarate,
however, will not harm the vitamin. Read
the label and make sure you know which form
of iron you are taking.
• Diabetics, people with overactive thyroids,
and those with rheumatic heart diseases
should be especially careful not to take
more than recommended dosages of vitamin
E.
• If you suffer from high blood pressure,
begin with 200 IUs of vitamin E per day
and gradually increase the dose over a period
of six weeks until you reach the desired
level.
• If you are taking vitamin E, you must
also take a minimum dose of zinc as well,
and some supplements will include the necessary
amount of zinc in the Vitamin E tablet or
capsule.
Vitamin E is an important element in our
arsenal of disease-battling nutrients, and
there is an increasing lack of vitamin E
in our diets because of our dependence on
processed food and the depletion of nutrients
in the soil. Fortunately, supplements allow
us to obtain whatever amount of vitamin
E we need to keep us healthy.
About the author:
Hamoon Arbabi
For more information about Multivitamins,
Proteins, Antioxidants and Ceatines go to
: http://homebusiness.nexuswebs.net/multivitamin.htm
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