vitamin D3
How to Select the Best Vitamin and Mineral Supplement
It can be quite confusing to go shopping for vitamins and
minerals these days. They are in every store. They come in every shape and
milligram with some having thousands of milligrams. Here is a brief history of
vitamin and mineral supplements to help you better understand what the best
choice is for you.
The history of vitamins and minerals goes way back to the
discovery in the 1930's. At this time certain deficiency diseases were
recognized as being caused by a lack of vitamins and minerals. When this was
realized the development of Recommended Daily Allowance (RDA) came about. In a
nutshell the RDA is the amount of essential nutrients from food that is needed
to keep a healthy person healthy.
What does this little history have to do with vitamins and
Minerals?
The first generation of vitamin/ mineral supplements were
developed using synthetic versions of vitamins and minerals. These supplements
were created in the laboratory to provide an inexpensive and standardized way
to meet RDA requirements. In fact the vast majority of vitamin and mineral
supplements are still made using synthetic vitamins and minerals. This includes
some of the most popular brands (the ones advertised regularly on the TV).
The major disadvantages of supplements made like this are:
Synthetic vitamins are not food so our body cannot uptake and utilize these at
the optimal levels. Dirt and Rocks are not food. The solubility of minerals and
their uptake and utilization in the body are critical factors.
A first generation vitamin may list 100% or more of the RDA
for a given nutrient. But this does not mean your body will be able to absorb
and utilize any or some of that nutrient. In other words synthetic vitamin and
mineral salts are less expensive but they do not provide effective support for
our body to bridge the nutritional gap in our diets.
The next generation of multi-vitamin and minerals is from
whole food extracts. They are food and vegetable extracts and or single exotic
plant or fruit products, e.g. Aloe Vera, golgi berries, etc. Whole food
supplements have nutrients that the human body is able to
utilize.
While whole food supplements are better than synthetic
vitamins they also have some disadvantages. The reality of our current fruits
and vegetables is that they are often deficient in important nutrients. Whole
food supplements cannot be standardized for the amounts of vitamins, minerals
or phytochemicals they may contain so they cannot be labeled for nutritional
values. No single fruit, vegetable, or plant can meet all RDA requirements.
Most plants are very high in vitamins but they are generally very low in
mineral levels. Whole food supplements are a step in the right direction but
since they cannot be standardized they can be significantly deficient in some
of the critical nutrients we need for maintaining wellness.
The next major advancement in vitamin and mineral technology
is here. The newest generation of supplements has many advantages including
standardized natural vitamin complexes, standardized plant-derived minerals,
standardized plant-derived phyto-chemicals, and all sources of these individual
nutrients are specifically identified and labeled.
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