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Vitamin
Puritan's Pride Vitamins
Vitamin A



Vitamins

Vitamins are organic chemicals that a given living organism requires in trace quantities for good health, but which the organism cannot synthesize, and therefore must obtain from its diet. The term vitamin does not encompass other essential nutrients such as dietary minerals, essential fatty acids or essential amino acids, nor is it used for the large number of other nutrients that are merely health-furthering, but not strictly essential. Humans require 13 different vitamins.

The word vitamin was coined by the Polish biochemist Kazimierz Funk in 1912. Vita in Latin is life and the -amin suffix is short for amine; at the time it was thought that all vitamins were amines. Though this is now known to be incorrect, the name has stuck.

Contents

History

The value of eating certain foods to maintain health was recognized long before vitamins were identified. The ancient Egyptians knew that feeding a patient liver would help cure night blindness, now known to be caused by a Vitamin A deficiency. In 1747, the Scottish surgeon James Lind discovered that citrus foods helped prevent scurvy, a particularly deadly disease characterized by bleeding and severe pain. In 1753, Lind published his Treatise on the Scurvy.

In 1905, William Fletcher discovered that eating unpolished rice instead of polished helped prevent the disease beriberi. The following year, Frederick Hopkins postulated that foods contained "accessory factors"—in addition to proteins, carbohydrates, fats, etc.—that were necessary to the human body. When Kazimierz Funk isolated the chemical that Fletcher had identified, he proposed that it be named "Vitamine". The name soon became synonymous with Hopkins' "accessory factors", and by the time it was shown that not all vitamins were amines, the word was ubiquitous. In 1920, Jack Cecil Drummond proposed that the final "e" be dropped, to deemphasize the "amine" reference, after the discovery that Vitamin C had no amine component, and the name has been "vitamin" ever since.

Throughout the early 1900s, scientists were able to isolate and identify a number of vitamins by depriving animals of them.

Human vitamins

Vitamin Name Chemical Name Solubility Deficiency Disease
Vitamin A Retinol Fat Night-blindness
Vitamin B1 Thiamine Water Beriberi
Vitamin B2 Riboflavin Water Ariboflavinosis
Vitamin B3 Niacin Water Pellagra
Vitamin B5 Pantothenic acid Water Paresthesias
Vitamin B6 Pyridoxine Water
Vitamin B7 Biotin Water
Vitamin B9 Folic acid Water
Vitamin B12 Cyanocobalamin Water Pernicious anaemia
Vitamin C Ascorbic acid Water Scurvy
Vitamin D1 Lamisterol Fat Rickets
Vitamin D2 Ergocalciferol Fat Rickets
Vitamin D3 Calciferol Fat Rickets
Vitamin D4 Dihydrotachysterol Fat Rickets
Vitamin D5 7-dehydrositosterol Fat Rickets
Vitamin E Tocopherol Fat
Vitamin K Naphthoquinone Fat

Vitamin deficiency and excess

An organism can survive for some time without vitamins, although prolonged vitamin deficit results in a disease state, often painful and potentially deadly. Body stores for different vitamins can vary widely; an adult may be deficient in Vitamins A or B12 for a year or more before developing a deficiency condition, while Vitamin B1 stores may only last a couple of weeks.

Fat-soluble vitamins may be stored in the body and can cause toxicity when taken in excess. Water-soluble vitamins are not stored in the body, with the exception of Vitamin B12, which is stored in the liver.

Pseudo-vitamins

  • Vitamin F was the designation originally given to essential fatty acids that the body cannot manufacture. They were "de-vitaminized" because they are fatty acids. Fatty acids are a major component of fats which, like water, are needed by the body in large quantities and thus do not fit the definition of vitamins which are needed only in trace amounts.
  • Although there is no Vitamin S, the suggestion has been made that salicylic acid may qualify for the criteria needed to be defined as a vitamin, and that in this case the designation "Vitamin S" could be used to describe it.
  • Herbalists and naturopaths have named various herbs and chemicals "vitamins", even though they are not, including Vitamin T and Vitamin U.
  • Some authorities say that Ubiquinone, also called Coenzyme Q10, is a vitamin. Ubiquinone is manufactured in small amounts by the body, like Vitamin D.
  • Pangamic acid and the related substance dimethylglycine are sometimes referred to as Vitamin B15.
  • Laetrile is sometimes referred to as Vitamin B17. Both pangamic acid and laetrile were first proposed as vitamins by Ernst T. Krebs; neither are recognized by the medical community as vitamins.
  • Bioflavonoids are sometimes called Vitamin P.
  • A few substances were once thought to be B-complex vitamins and are referred to as B-vitamins in older literature, including B4 (Adenine) and B8, but are no longer recognized as such.

Colloquial usage of the term

  • The sedative Ketamine is often called Vitamin K when used as a recreational drug.
  • Vitamin V is a colloquialism for Viagra.
  • Likewise, Vitamin A and Vitamin C are sometimes used as slang terms for alcoholic beverages and caffeine, respectively.
  • Ativan an antianxiety agent is often called "Vitamin A" (off the record).
  • Antipsychotic drug haldol is sometimes referred to as Vitamin H in psych hospitals (off-the-record, of course!).
  • Vitamin W is a colloquialism for water.
  • Vitamin I is a colloquialism for ibuprofen.
  • Colloquially, the word vitamin is often used to refer to vitamin supplements, products, often in pill form, that contain one or more purified vitamins which are used to supplement the vitamin content of a diet.

Non-human vitamins

Different organisms need different trace organic substances. Most mammals need, with few exceptions, the same vitamins as humans. One notable exception is ascorbic acid; most mammals can synthesize this. The less related a species is to mammals, the more different the organisms' requirements become. For example, some bacteria need adenine. Pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ) was reported as a vitamin for mice in 2003. In general, plants can synthesize all the organic substances they need and therefore, do not require any vitamins.

See also

References

External links



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