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16.1: Minerals and Vitamins Compared

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    58130
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    Much of what’s been said about vitamins may also be said about minerals. With a few rare exceptions, all the minerals needed by the body can be found in an ordinary, varied diet. In a similar way, they perform crucial bodily functions, and mineral excesses, carried far enough, can be toxic.


    Carbohydrates, fat, protein, and vitamins are all organic—carbon-based chemical structures.


    But minerals do differ from vitamins in some striking ways. For one, minerals aren’t destroyed by burning. As has been noted, when food is burned, minerals form the ash left behind. The adult body contains several pounds of minerals—a fact confirmed by the ashes left after cremation (see Fig. 16-1).

    Our mineral content, therefore, is measured in pounds, whereas our vitamin content is measured in ounces. As might be expected, some minerals are required in much larger amounts than any of the vitamins.

    Calcium, phosphorus, magnesium (the three found mostly in bone), and the electrolytes sodium, potassium, and chloride are called the major minerals, and are the subject of this chapter. The adult recommended intake for each of these minerals is more than 300 mg per day (see Appendix A).

    The other minerals, called the trace minerals, will be discussed in the next chapter. The adult recommended intake for these trace minerals (except for the pregnancy recommendation of 27 mg iron) is less than 20 mg per day.


    This page titled 16.1: Minerals and Vitamins Compared is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Judi S. Morrill.

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