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Re: Iridology/Retinol

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The basics

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Vitamin A is essential to the health of your eyes, bones, skin and

immune system. Growth and healing also benefit from the antioxidants

that this key vitamin supplies. And some studies have even shown

that vitamin A may help fight cancer. So can you really get too

much? The answer to that is Yes... if you're getting the wrong kind.

Researchers at the Harvard Medical School collected diet and

supplement data from the Nurses' Health Study for more than 72,000

postmenopausal women, aged 34-77. Over a period of 18 years their

dietary questionnaires were updated periodically.

Analysis of the data revealed that subjects who consumed the most

vitamin A from food sources had a 69% higher risk of hip fracture

compared to women who consumed the least vitamin A. Women who had a

high intake of dietary vitamin A and vitamin A supplements had an

89% higher risk of hip fracture.

Or those are the basic details that the mainstream media reported

anyway. The actual conclusions of the Harvard study are not quite so

cut and dried. But they do provide some useful guidance in

determining the best way to get your vitamin A.

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What's in a name?

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Vitamin A from food sources comes in two different forms: retinol

and beta-carotene. Retinol is a vitamin A compound that has

previously been associated with hip fractures in postmenopausal

women. In comparison, beta-carotene (which the body converts into

vitamin A) has not been associated with fracture risk.

Retinol can be found in a wide variety of animal foods, including:

dairy products such as whole milk and whole milk yogurt, butter and

cheese. Beef and chicken liver also contain retinol. And these are

the foods that the Harvard research found to be associated with

increased hip fracture risk. (An earlier study that used data from

the same Nurses' Health Study concluded that women who drank two or

more glasses of milk per day increased their risk of fractures

compared with women who drank less than one glass per week.)

The Harvard study also shows that most of the vitamin A supplements

taken by the women in the study were included in multivitamins that

contained a synthetic form of vitamin A - a form that delivered

(yep, you guessed it) retinol. This vitamin A form has been

associated with insufficient bone density and osteoporosis risk.

The preferable type of vitamin A is pro-vitamin A, also known as

beta-carotene, and is abundant in dark green leafy vegetables and

colorful orange vegetables and fruits (for which it helps supply the

color) such as pumpkins, squash, sweet potatoes, peaches, apricots,

cantaloupes, mangoes and (most famously) carrots.

In supplement form, beta-carotene is naturally available in fish

oil. A particularly good source is cod liver oil, which contains

beta-carotene along with vitamin D, and the combination of the two

may provide excellent support for good bone health.

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Up the intake

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The most recent vitamin A study comes from researchers at the Jean

Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts

University.

In two separate phases, the Tufts team fed 100 grams of pureed

carrots and 300 grams of pureed spinach to male subjects. Analysis

of serum blood samples revealed that, in both cases, considerably

less absorption of beta-carotene took place than was previously

thought.

Further studies will be needed to confirm that foods with high beta-

carotene content need to be eaten in greater quantities to ensure

adequate vitamin A intake. But let's face it; a higher consumption

of vegetables would do almost all of us a world of good.

Nevertheless, the question lingers: Can you get too much vitamin A,

even if it's in the " right " form?

Apparently you can if you smoke cigarettes. Studies show that

smokers with a high intake of beta-carotene are at greater risk of

developing lung cancer. And, again, as the Harvard study

demonstrates, postmenopausal women should avoid excessive intake of

food sources and supplements that contain vitamin A in the retinol

form.

As for just about everyone else, it's almost impossible to overdo

vitamin A consumption, according to HSI Panelist Allan Spreen, M.D.

In fact, Dr. Spreen tells me there are only about two-dozen recorded

cases of people who took too much vitamin A and suffered any

distress whatsoever. Regarding supplement dosage, Dr. Spreen

suggests that 10,000 IU of beta-carotene vitamin A per day is

adequate.

If you still have questions or doubts about getting too much vitamin

A, consult with your doctor or a dependable nutritionist to devise a

balanced plan that's right for you.

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> CLO is not the best source of A as the A in CLO is predominantely

> retinol, which is implicated in osteoporosis and hip fractures in

the

> elderly. Best would be to use beta-carotene only, drink that

carrot

> juice and eat all those orange/red colored vegetables.

> Don Quai

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