Instead, I will continue posting useful information under this heading which will hopefully help eating disordered and 'normal' people alike to make better choices about what they choose to put into their bodies... because as I've discussed before... a calorie is not simply a calorie. EVERY bite we take is an opportunity to improve our body's condition, and a key to successful dieting regardless of how extreme you are doing it is to avoid empty calories at all cost. (yay for orthorexia!)
For me... my quest is to stay as safe and healthy as I can while plummeting down the size/weight charts... which means I track everything I eat and make sure I'm getting at least a fair amount of what I 'should be' (except carbs and fats...). So... let's talk about micro-nutrients for the next 30 or so of these posts lol... First on the list is Vitamin A.... The picture in this post gives you some basic information... here is some more detail....
Where it comes from:
Eggs, Liver and milk primarily, though some cartenoids can be synthesized into Retinoids (vitamin A). Bellow is a list of foods and their content :D According to one source, vitamin A is not as plentiful in plant sources as once thought, so please take the chart bellow with a grain of salt :D
http://whfoods.org/genpage.php?dbid=106&tname=nutrient |
RDA:
Life stage group | RDA Adequate intakes (AI*) μg/day | Upper limit μg/day |
---|---|---|
Infants 0–6 months 7–12 months | 400* 500* | 600 600 |
Children 1–3 years 4–8 years | 300 400 | 600 900 |
Males 9–13 years 14–18 years 19 – >70 years | 600 900 900 | 1700 2800 3000 |
Females 9–13 years 14–18 years 19 – >70 years | 600 700 700 | 1700 2800 3000 |
Pregnancy <19 years 19 – >50 years | 750 770 | 2800 3000 |
Lactation <19 years 19 – >50 years | 1200 1300 | 2800 3000 |
Toxicity:
Consuming too much of this vitamin is a bad thing, as it is fat soluble and cannot be easily passed through the system. So, try to stay within the RDA range :D
Deficiency:
Deficiency is rare in developed nations, at least among people who eat well... but here is what can happen if you don't get enough Vitamin A.
- Night vision may decrease (significantly)
- Cateracts may develop
- your skin may get goose-bumpy all the time (ingrown hairs)
- immune system may suffer (difficulty in fighting off viruses)
Interactions:
If your diet is deficient in protien, zinc or dietary fat ( :o oh dear... I fail here I'm sure...) your body will have difficulty absorbing it.
How Cooking effects it? (i.e. is raw > cooked?)
It doesn't change the levels in animal sources. In plant sources, cooking quickly... like... steaming and stuff helps a lot with making it more available. In fact, this is one of the few nutrients (when taken from tomatoes) where canned > Fresh/Frozen!
For more information on Vitamin A, please check out the following links.
http://whfoods.org/genpage.php?tname=nutrient&dbid=106
http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/drug-information/DR601623
2 comments:
Thanks for posting this, you reminded me to take my multivit-plus-iron, I am trying so hard to remember every day and failing miserably :(
Never done a SW flush. I guess you've read about it on Ana Regzig's old blog though? I wish she was still around to answer questions.
x
Hi Hun :D Glad you found it helpful. I love her blog, and was so psyched when she posted last month (maybe 2 months ago now?) but well, as I'm sure you know... it was only those two posts lol ; ;
I did yes, but I also am going to do a master cleanse next month (which I found out about after reading her blog and searching for more info about the SWF) which is really what inspired me to do it.
It sounded so awful... and the whole drinking only lemonade thing also sounds like it will be a challenge, so I didn't want to take both on at once.
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