Vitamins Water Soluble
Vitamins Water Soluble
Vitamins Water Soluble
VITAMINS
OVERVIEW OF WATER-SOLUBLE
VITAMINS
• Dissolve in water
• Generally readily excreted
• Subject to cooking losses
• Function as a coenzyme
• Participate in energy metabolism
• 50-90% of B vitamins are absorbed
• Marginal deficiency more common (impairment
of certain biochemical reactions)
GENERAL PROPERTIES
• Soluble in water
• Minimal storage of dietary excess
• Excreted in the urine
• Deficiency symptoms often develop rapidly
• Generally not stored in the body.
• Must be supplied everyday in the diet
• Generally do not have precursor
B COMPLEX VITAMINS
• Co-enzymes (activate
enzymes)
• Found in the same foods
• Single deficiency rare
• Homocysteine metabolism
• Folate, B12, B6
THIAMIN (B1)
• Coenzymes
• Participate in many energy-yielding
metabolic pathways
• Fatty acids broken down and burned for energy
• Flavin mononucleotide and Flavin adenine
dinucleotide
DEFICIENCY OF RIBOFLAVIN
• Ariboflavinosis
• Glossitis, cheilosis, seborrheic dermatitis,
stomatitis, eye disorder, throat disorder, nervous
system disorder
• Part of Coenzyme-A
• Essential for metabolism of CHO, fat, protein
• Deficiency rare
• Usually in combination with other
deficiencies
• No known toxicity
FOOD SOURCES OF
PANTOTHENIC ACID
• “From every side”
• Meat
• Milk
• Mushroom
• Liver
• Peanut
• Eggs
• Adequate Intake = 5 mg/day
• Daily Value 10 mg
• Average intake meets all
PYRIDOXINE (B6)
• 3 compounds
• Coenzyme
• Activate enzymes needed for metabolism of CHO, fat ,
protein
• Synthesize nonessential amino acid via transamination
• Synthesize neurotransmitters
• Synthesize hemoglobin and WBC
OTHER ROLES OF VITAMIN B-6
Homocysteine
• Produces toxic effect on arterial walls
(atherosclerosis)
• Metabolized by vitamins B-6, B-12 and folate
FOOD SOURCES OF VITAMIN B-6
Well absorbed
• Meat, fish, poultry
• Enriched cereals
• Potatoes
• Milk
Less well absorbed
• Fruits and vegetables: Banana, spinach, avocado
Heat and alkaline sensitive
B6 DEFICIENCY
Widespread symptoms
• Depression
• Vomiting
• Skin disorders
• Nerve irritation
• Impaired immune system
B6 TOXICITY
• Nerve damage
• Difficulty walking
• Numbness in hands/feet
B-6 AS A MEDICINE?
• PMS
• B-6 to increase the level of serotonin
• Not a reliable treatment
• Carpal tunnel syndrome
• Toxicity potential
• Can lead to irreversible nerve damage with > 200 mg/day
• Upper Level set at 100 mg/day
RDA FOR VITAMIN B-6
• Coenzyme
• DNA synthesis
• Homocysteine metabolism
• Neurotransmitter formation
DEFICIENCY OF FOLATE
• Pregnant women
• Alcoholics
• Megaloblastic Anemia
NEURAL TUBE DEFECTS
• Neural tube closes first 28 days of
pregnancy
• Forms brain and spinal cord
• By the time pregnancy is confirmed,
damage is done
NEURAL TUBE DEFECTS
• Spina bifida
• Spinal malformation
• Paralysis
• Anencephaly
• No brain cortex
• Stillborn or die within hours
• Importance of folate before and during
pregnancy
• Government requires folate enrichment
of flour and cereal
• May prevent 50% neural tube defects
FOLATE AND HOMOCYSTEINE
• Liver
• Fortified breakfast cereals
• Grains, legumes
• Foliage vegetables
• Susceptible to heat, oxidation, ultraviolet light
• Synthetic form better absorbed
RDA FOR FOLATE
• 400 ug/day for adults
• (600 ug/day for pregnant women)
• Average intake below RDA
• FDA limits nonprescription supplements to 400 ug
per tablet for non-pregnant adults
• OTC Prenatal supplement contains 800 ug
• Excess can mask vitamin B-12 deficiency
• Upper Level set at 1 mg
COBALAMIN VITAMIN B-12
• Compounds containing the mineral cobalt
• Synthesized by bacteria, fungi, and other lower
organisms
• Role in folate metabolism
• Maintenance of the myelin sheaths
• RBC formation
• Pernicious anemia (associated with nerve
degeneration and paralysis)
DEFICIENCY OF VITAMIN B-12
• Pernicious anemia
• Nerve degeneration, weakness
• Tingling/numbness in the extremities (parasthesia)
• Paralysis and death
• Looks like folate deficiency
• Usually (95%) due to decreased absorption
ability
• Achlorhydria especially in elderly
• Injection of B-12 needed
• Takes ~20 years on a deficient diet to see
nerve destruction
THERAPY FOR INEFFECTIVE
ABSORPTION
• Many factors can disrupt this process
• Monthly injections of vitamin B-12
• Vitamin B-12 nasal gel
• Megadoses of vitamin B-12 to allow for passive
diffusion
FOOD SOURCES OF VITAMIN B-
12
• Synthesized by bacteria, fungi and algae
• (Stored primarily in the liver)
• Animal products
• Organ meat
• Seafood
• Eggs
• Hot dogs
• Milk
LOW B12 INTAKE
• Vegans: will have to find alternative source
• Breastfed infants of vegan mothers
• Symptoms of Pernicious anemia
• Takes longer to develop
• 5-10 years of anemia
• 20 years nerve damage
RDA FOR VITAMIN B-12
• James Lind
published his
Treatise on the
Scurvy in 1754.
Lime juice was
made mandatory
on British Navy
sailing ships 40
years later
DEFICIENCY OF VITAMIN C
• Scurvy
• Deficient diet for 20-40 days
• Fatigue, pinpoint hemorrhages
• Bleeding gums and joints. Hemorrhages
• Associated with poverty; macrobiotic diet
• Rebound Scurvy
• Sudden halt to high levels of vitamin C supplements
SCURVY
Scorbutic Rosary
Follicular
Hemorrhages
FOOD SOURCES OF VITAMIN C
• Citrus fruit • Easily lost through
• Potato cooking
• Hemochromatosis
• Vitamin C enhances iron absorption
• Widely distributed
• Milk
• Liver
• Eggs
• Peanuts
• Lecithin added to food
• Deficiency rare
NEEDS FOR CHOLINE
• Adequate Intake is 550 mg/day for adult males
• Adequate Intake is 425 mg/day for adult females
• Normal consumption is ~700-1000 mg/day
• High doses associated with fishy body odor, vomiting,
salivation, sweating, hypotension, GI effects
• Upper Level is set at 3.5 g/day (3500 mg/day)
VITAMIN-LIKE COMPOUNDS
• Choline
• Carnitine
• Inositol
• Taurine
• Lipoic acid
• Synthesized in the body at the expense of amino acids and
other nutrients