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Optimal Vitamin A Nutrition from Preformed Vitamin A and Beta Carotene
Each softgel provides:
Vitamin A (beta carotene) 15,000 I.U.
Vitamin A (from fish liver oil) 10,000 I.U.
Other ingredients: gelatin, magnesium stearate
Vitamin A is a fat-soluble nutrient that occurs in nature in two forms: preformed vitamin A and provitamin A, or carotene.
Carotene is derived from plants and is converted by the body to vitamin A.
Preformed vitamin A is concentrated in certain tissues of animal products in which the animal has metabolized the carotene contained in its food into vitamin A.
That vitamin A is essential for human health is well established. Research indicates that no more than 50,000 I.U. of vitamin A per day can be utilized by the body except in therapeutic cases, where up to 100,000 I.U. are recommended. It has been suggested that the best level is somewhere between 25,000 I.U. and 50,000 I.U.While preformed vitamin A can be toxic at extremely high doses given over a prolonged period, beta carotene has extremely low toxicity. Although excessive intake of beta carotene does not appear to be toxic, carotenemia, a yellowish discoloration of the skin, may occur. The condition has no adverse effects and disappears when carotene intake is reduced.
Both Forms of Vitamin A Are Important
Most of the beta carotene consumed in the human diet is converted in the intestine and liver to Vitamin A, but some is absorbed intact from the intestines by the lymphatics and circulates in the blood. While research indicates that both preformed vitamin A and beta carotene have a protective effect against infection and some types of cancer, it is suggested that they operate through different mechanisms — vitamin A through its role in the maintenance of epithelial tissue and beta carotene through its antioxidant effect as a powerful scavenger of singlet oxygen.
While many health professionals now recommend using beta carotene only, because of its low toxicity, preformed vitamin A also has some advantages.
Preformed vitamin A is absorbed by the body 3 to 5 hours after ingestion, whereas the conversion and absorption of carotene takes 6 to seven hours. Beta carotene is converted to vitamin A by fat-splitting enzymes and bile salts. The conversion process is stimulated by the hormone thyroxin. Patients with hypothyroidism, as well as some diabetics, are unable to convert beta carotene to vitamin A.
Intake of polyunsaturated fatty acids with carotene results in rapid destruction of carotene unless other antioxidants are also present.
To provide optimal vitamin A nutrition, A-25 Plex provides both beta carotene and preformed vitamin A from natural sources.
Vitamin A Is Essential for Tissue Growth, Repair and Maintenance
Vitamin A is essential for, among other things, vision (especially night vision), regulation of cell development, reproduction and immunity. Studies in third-world populations have demonstrated the enormous power of this vitamin in boosting resistance to infection and reducing the related mortality.
The power of vitamin A to boost immunity is due in part to its essential role in the maintenance of epithelial tissue. It is necessary for the proper function of the cornea, all mucous membranes, the lining of the gastrointestinal tract, the lungs, the vagina, the urinary tract, the bladder and the skin. By maintaining healthy epithelium, vitamin A can also interrupt the process by which some cancers are initiated.
In the absence of vitamin A, these specialized tissue cells secrete a hard protein (keratin) rather than the mucus needed for protection and lubrication. Although keratin is a normal protein of hair and nails, it dries and hardens epithelial tissues. When this occurs, cell function is impaired or halted. The tissue wastes away and becomes susceptible to bacterial infection.
One of the first symptoms of vitamin A deficiency is night blindness. In the body, vitamin A combines with the protein opsin to form rhodopsin (visual purple). Rhodopsin occurs in the rod cells of the retina and is responsible for visual dark adaptation. When light strikes the retina this molecule is split, a small amount of retinal is destroyed and a constant supply of circulating retinal is needed for synthesis of visual purple. Other light-sensitive pigments also require vitamin A, including iodopsin, cyanopsin and porphyropsin (color pigments in the cone cells of the retina).
Vitamin A is essential in the chemical process whereby cholesterol is converted into female estrogens and male androgens. Insufficient supply of these hormones results in degeneration of the sex organs.
Vitamin A is important in growth, in formation and modeling of endochondral tissues of long bones and in the normal spacing of teeth. It is also necessary for the synthesis of certain proteins and compounds that can inhibit the formation of tumors.
A chronic lack of vitamin A in the diet results in:
Keratinosis and Hyperkeratosis
Night blindness and other eye problems
Bitot's spots (dry patches on the conjunctiva)
Reduced resistance to infection
Impaired growth
Weight loss and anorexia
Diminished saliva and histological changes in taste buds.
Reduced steroid synthesis
Improper tooth and bone formation and crooked teeth.
Slower production of RNA
WARNING: This information is provided for the health professionals only. This publication and the product contained herein have not been approved or evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This publication, and the product contained herein are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease. The product relates to nutritional support only.
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