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Facts About Vitamin A and Carotenoids
Part 1: What is vitamin A?
 More of this Feature
• Part 2: How much vitamin A do you need?
• Part 3: Risks and symptoms of vitamin A deficiency
• Part 4: How to know when supplements are necessary
• Part 5: Food sources of vitamin A
• Part 6: References
 
  Related Resources
• The Fat Soluble Vitamins - A, E, and K
• Vitamin D and Zinc
• Vitamin D
 
 From Other Guides
• Vitamin A - Nutrition
 
 

Vitamin A: What is it?

     Vitamin A is a family of fat-soluble vitamins. Retinol is one of the most active, or usable, forms of vitamin A, and is found in animal foods such as liver and eggs. It can be converted to retinal and retinoic acid, other active forms of the vitamin A family. Some plant foods contain orange pigments called provitamin A carotenoids that the liver can convert to retinol. Beta-carotene is a provitamin A carotenoid found in many foods(1-3). Lycopene, lutein, and zeaxanthin are also carotenoids commonly found in food, but your body cannot convert them to vitamin A.

     Vitamin A plays an important role in vision, bone growth, reproduction, cell division and cell differentiation, which is the process by which a cell decides what it is going to become (1, 4-7). It also maintains the surface linings of your eye and your respiratory, urinary, and intestinal tracts (8). When those linings break down, bacteria can enter your body and cause infection (8). Vitamin A also helps your body regulate its immune system (1, 4, 9). The immune system helps prevent or fight off infections by making white blood cells that destroy harmful bacteria and viruses. Vitamin A may help lymphocytes, a type of white blood cell that fights infections, function more effectively. Vitamin A also may help prevent bacteria and viruses from entering your body by maintaining the integrity of skin and mucous membranes (10, 11,12).

     Some carotenoids, in addition to serving as a source of vitamin A, have been shown to function as antioxidants in laboratory tests. However, this role has not been consistently demonstrated in humans (13). Antioxidants protect cells from free radicals, which are potentially damaging by-products of the body's metabolism that may contribute to the development of some chronic diseases (2, 14-16).

Next page > How much vitamin A do you need? > Page 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6

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