1 / 12

Vitamin A

MICRONUTRIENTS. Vitamin A. Ashwini Kalantri. Vitamins. Essential Nutrients Types Fat soluble – A, D, E, K Water soluble – B group, C. Vitamin A. Per-formed vitamin – Retinol Pro-vitamin – β- carotene 1IU = 0.3µg retinol (0.55µg of retinol palmitate ) Retinol Equivalent (RE)

ayoka
Download Presentation

Vitamin A

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. MICRONUTRIENTS Vitamin A Ashwini Kalantri

  2. Vitamins • Essential Nutrients • Types • Fat soluble – A, D, E, K • Water soluble – B group, C

  3. Vitamin A • Per-formed vitamin – Retinol • Pro-vitamin – β-carotene • 1IU = 0.3µg retinol (0.55µg of retinol palmitate) • Retinol Equivalent (RE) • 1µg retinol = 1 RE • 1µg β–carotene = 0.167 RE • 1RE = 3.333 IU of Vitamin A

  4. Functions • Normal Vision • Retinal pigmentation  vision in low light • Integrity and function of glandular and epithelial tissue of Respiratory System, Urinary Tract, Skin and Eyes • Skeletal Growth • Anti-infective • Protective against some epithelial cancers

  5. Sources • Animal Foods: liver, eggs, butter, cheese, milk, fish, meat • Plant Foods: green leafy vegetables – spinach. Yellow and green fruits – papaya, mango, pumpkin. Roots – carrots. • Fortified Foods: vanaspati, margarine, milk. Liver stores Vitamin A as retinol palmitate. Reserves for 6-9 months

  6. DeficiencyXerophthalmia • XN Night blindness • X1A Conjunctivalxerosis • X1B Bitot spot • X2 Corneal xerosis • X3A Corneal ulceration, less than 1/3 • X3B Corneal ulceration, more than 1/3 • XS Corneal scar • XF Xerophthalmicfundus Singh, K. "Modified classification of xerophthalmia." Indian Journal of Ophthalmology 39.3 (1991): 105.

  7. DeficiencyExtra-ocular • Folicular Hyperkeratosis • Anorexia • Growth retardation • Mortality and morbidity due to respiratory and intestinal infections.

  8. Prevention • Improvement of diet • Reducing the severity of the contributory factors • PEM, respiratory tract infection, diarrhea, measles. • 6 monthly massive dose administration • 1,00,000 IU (6 months – 1 year) • 2,00,000 IU (1 year – 6 years)

  9. Treatment • Urgent treatment • Early stages of Xerophthalmia  Massive dose of Vitamin A (2,00,000 IU) orally. Repeat after 4 weeks. • All children with corneal ulcers

  10. Assessment • Population surveys - clinical and biochemical • Per-school children (6 months – 6 years) WHO TRS 672

  11. Recommended Dietary Allowance ICMR. “Nutrient requirement and recommended dietary allowances for Indians, A report of the expert group of the ICMR” 2010

  12. Toxicity • Retinol • Nausea, vomiting, anorexia and sleep disorders • Skin desquamation, enlarged liver, papillar odema • Carotene • Colour skin and plasma, not dangerous • Teratogenic effects of massive dose of vitamin A

More Related