Posts Tagged ‘Eye Health’

Health Benefits and Vitamins

January 7th, 2010

When it comes to vitamin A most of us know it is a powerful antioxidant. But what most individuals don’t know is that those of us who work long hours on our computers, or work under lights for an extended amount of time require more vitamin A than those who do not.

Vitamins has many functions and benefits which we will explore. It’s common knowledge that vitamin A’s most popular benefit is maintaining healthy eye function. This is why vitamin A is called the retina vitamin, it supports the retina in our eyes to continue its proper function.

Outside of vitamin A being an agent for good eye health. Vitamin A also plays a major role in the building of strong bones, teeth, and healthy soft skin, this vitamin is also responsible for assisting gatric juices in our stomachs for proper digestion.

Internal Benefits of Vitamin A

The internal health benefits are numerous including; keeping your eye lids moist, mouth, protects the mucus membranes of your nose, saturates the throat, stomach, and lungs. Let’s just say Vitamin A is the powerhouse vitamin for providing moisture to the body.

Vitamin A is our body’s internal moisturizer. The tissues in our bodies need Vitamin A for normal repair of tissues, if damage occurs to the skin, such as a scratch, cut, or bruise it will benefit you if your diet is rich in this supplement. This supplement aides the body in the regrowth of cell tissues. It also prevents scarring when healing if applied topically in a cream.

Please discover how UNICEF is helping poor children receive vitamin A by visiting:

http://hubpages.com/hub/health-benefits-and-vitamins




By: adrienne manson

Bilberry Extract::What Are The Health Benefits?

January 7th, 2010

 

Here, you can find out about the bilberry health benefits and learn a little more about the plant.  Berries, of all kinds, contain unique antioxidants.  These antioxidants are responsible for the deep beautiful colors of the fruits.  Most experts recommend adding more berries to your diet.  But, bilberries are not readily available in many areas of the world.

The berries are found growing in damp, acidic soils throughout the temperate and subarctic regions.  They are closely related to the North American blueberries and huckleberries, which are of the same genus.  The easiest way to distinguish between the blueberry and the bilberry is that the bilberries occur in single or pairs on the bush, rather than clusters.  The fruit is also smaller and darker, appearing nearly black.  The inner flesh is red or purple, while that of the blueberry is light green.

Bilberry tea is a good substitute for eating the fresh berry.  Several companies provide this type of tea.  It is created by using the dried fruit.  It is a caffeine-free beverage, with a fruity taste that herbal tea lovers find delicious. 

Benefits:: Eyes, Digestive System

Primarily, bilberry benefits the eyes and the digestive system.  The bilberry health benefits are due to the anthocyanins that it contains.  Similar to the proanthocyanidins found in other dark purple fruits and vegetables, these pigments seem to act like UV filters within the eyes, protecting them from UV rays, which are responsible for the formation of cataracts. 

That’s one of the reasons that you see bilberry eye health claims.  Another is the laboratory studies showing that it may inhibit of reverse macular degeneration.  Lutein and zeaxanthin, which are found in the carotenoid family of antioxidants, are also beneficial for these conditions.

Benefits::Heart & Circulatory System

There may be bilberry health benefits to the heart and circulatory system, but it is the visual benefit that is currently driving sales of bilberry herbal supplements.  For those people that want bilberry health benefits, but can’t find them at their local grocers, these supplements are a simple solution.  The reason for their rarity is that they are much more difficult to cultivate than blueberries and bushes produce only small amounts each year. 

Benefits::Cancer

One of the bilberry benefits may be a reduced cancer risk.  Most antioxidants have been shown in laboratory studies, animal models and human clinical trials to have an anti-cancer effect.  As I mentioned, the bilberry eye health benefits for preventing and reversing macular degeneration are currently driving sales, but many people are also interested in the prevention of cancer and heart disease.

Best Use of Bilberry

If you like bilberry tea, go ahead and drink it.  You might want to use it to wash down a multi-nutritional supplement that contains the extract.  Single ingredient bilberry herbal supplements are not nearly as beneficial as multi-nutritional ones.  There is only so much that a single nutrient, of any kind can do. 

Striving for optimal nutritional intake should be everyone’s goal.  It seems that every day, there is a new story about how low levels of this vitamin or that mineral are associated with a life threatening health problem.  Today, vitamin D was in the news.  While the bilberry health benefits may be many, it will not prevent nutritional deficiencies.  You need something more to do that.  For more information of Bilberry Extract and other Herbal Extracts, please see my website listed below.  Thank, Larry L. Taylor

 




By: Larry L. Taylor

The Crucial Benefits of Vitamin a

December 10th, 2009

Vitamin A is probably best known for its role in eye health and promoting good vision and the legend that eating carrots is helpful for night vision, in particular, is based on the high levels of betacarotene that they contain. It is indeed true that retinol, one of the products of beta carotene within the body, is essential for the production of adequate amounts of rhodopsin, a substance also known as “visual purple”. Adequate amounts of visual purple in the light receptor cells of the retina are vital for good night vision. Deficiency of retinol vitamin A is therefore commonly associated with the condition known as night blindness which is in fact the first symptom of the deficiency. If deficiency persists it may ultimately lead to damage to the cornea and even blindness; sadly still a major cause of blindness in the developing world.

More generally, vitamin A provides very good examples of the holistic functioning of the body’s countless systems; in particular the way in which various nutrients depend upon each other if they’re to operate effectively. A deficiency of the essential mineral, zinc, for example, has an inhibiting effect on the process by which vitamin A is metabolised and activated for use within the body.

Deficiency of vitamin A, on the other hand, is known to contribute to the anaemia caused by iron deficiency. It appears that vitamin A is essential to make iron available for the production of oxygen carrying red blood cells and supplementation with vitamin A has therefore been shown to help in the alleviation of anaemia when combined with the supplements of iron which are of course also necessary.

Not surprisingly, therefore, vitamin A is also required for the proper functioning of the immune system and in particular for the development of the white blood cells which are vital for the body’s effective immune response. Deficiency in vitamin A has been shown to lead to an increase in the incidence and severity of various infectious diseases, including HIV and measles, which remain a major cause of mortality in the developing world, particularly amongst children.

Vitamin A is also known as a powerful anti-oxidant which operates with vitamins C and E, and the minerals selenium and zinc, to destroy both fat and water soluble free radicals. So important is this anti-oxidant role of vitamin A, that some research has suggested it may play a part in combatting certain common cancers, although this issue remains controversial. There are two types of vitamin A of which to be aware; retinol, also known as preformed vitamin A, and the provitamin A carotenoids, of which betacarotene is the most important and best known, which may be converted to retinol within the body. Rich food sources of retinol vitamin A are meat, especially offal such as liver, oily fish and fish liver oil, and dairy produce. Betacarotene and other carotenoids are principally derived from fruits and vegetables.

The US Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA) for vitamin A is 3,000 IU (900 mcg) per day for adolescents over 14 and adults. In Europe the recommended figures are slightly lower at 2,664 IU (800 mcg). Both these figures are supposed to be sufficient to obtain the many health benefits of the vitamin, but these are so numerous and important that it is probably wise to regard the RDA as the minimum necessary for the avoidance of deficiency. Supplementing to a total intake of 5,000 IU should ensure optimum benefits and levels of up to 10,000 should do no harm in most cases.

The one very important exception to this is pregnant women and those seeking to become pregnant, for whom intakes of 5,000 IU and above may increase the risk of birth defects. Women in these categories should supplement only with the much less potent betacarotene, if at all, and should also avoid the high retinol foods identified above.

Some caution is required for all people, however, because being fat soluble, vitamin A is stored in the liver and can in rare instances build up to levels which may give rise to problems. Of course this characteristic of the vitamin is not confined to the human liver, and writers on this subject are fond of pointing out by way of example, apparently in all seriousness, that polar bear liver is likely to contain a concentration of vitamin A which is toxic to humans, and should therefore be avoided as a foodstuff.

At the risk of stating the obvious, that’s unlikely to present any significant practical difficulties for most of us. And with the exception of pregnancy, the potentially serious consequences of outright vitamin A toxicity seem generally to have arisen only from very large doses.

So exercise a little common sense, and if you can just manage to steer clear of that polar bear liver you should be able to enjoy the benefits of vitamin A without any problems.




By: Steve Smith