Mineral
Information
(Vitamins
Information Here)
INTRODUCTION
TO MINERALS
CALCIUM
MAGNESIUM
ZINC
ELECTROLYTES
INTRODUCTION:
Minerals, there are two types of minerals (not
really types, but classifications), minerals
and trace minerals. A mineral is an inorganic
chemical element. The classification "mineral"
is given to seven such elements that your body
needs at least 100mgs of daily. The classification
"trace mineral" is given to fourteen
such elements that your body needs less than
100mgs of daily. The minerals are calcium, chloride,
magnesium, potassium, sodium, and sulfur. The
trace minerals are boron, chromium, cobalt,
copper, iodine, iron, manganese, molybdenum,
nickel, selenium, silicon, tin, vanadium, and
zinc. Actually, aluminum and lithium are trace
elements too, but little is known about them
and why or how much we need them.
What
vitamins and minerals do in our bodies is very
important to know. Vitamins and minerals are
the reasons we function on the cellular level.
Vitamins make enzymes and hormones, the essential
parts of our living. Enzymes are compounds your
body makes from vitamins, minerals, and proteins
and combinations of them. Enzymes speed up chemical
reactions in your body. One very important one
is the anti-oxidant enzyme and I will get into
it in detail later. Hormones are chemical messengers
that tell your body what to do. Hormones regulate
your growth, sexual characteristics, blood pressure,
heart rate, glucose levels, and many other functions.
Vitamins and minerals have no calories and do
not give you energy, but lead to the processes
that can cause energy, like oxygen increase
in the blood, more red blood cells, more protein
conversion, etc.. and must be eaten in your
food for you to get them, as well as taking
supplements, which is a good idea even while
on a good nutritious diet. I don't think any
of us could truly eat a good diet every day
and even if we did, some vitamins and minerals
would not be counted for or not in a sufficient
amount.
The
amounts of vitamins and minerals we should take
is of much controversy. The recommended daily
allowances are there for the purpose of preventing
any deficiency diseases and are not enough for
many people, in fact, they are just enough for
prevention. The fact is, we should consume twice
that amount of certain vitamins and minerals,
but not all of them. With water soluble vitamins,
you could safely take much larger doses than
the RDA and your body will just wash out the
excess in your fluids, but fat soluble vitamins
like I said are stored, so you could actually
build an over supply and potentially cause problems.
Once
you start eating properly and taking in all
of your vitamins and minerals you will be on
your way to a healthier mind and body, but this
will not happen right away. After some months
of a healthy diet, you will begin to fell more
energetic, happier, more optimistic, fewer illness
problems, and just a better sense of being.
Here
is a list of safe dosages for a healthy adult.
Vitamins
Vitamin
A: 5,000 - 25,000 IU's
Vitamins B: Thiamin 2-100 mgs
Riboflavin 50-100 mgs
Niacin 20-100 mgs
Pyridoxine 3-50 mgs
Folic acid 800 mcgs - 2 mgs
Cobalamin 500-1,000 mcgs
Pantothenic acid 4-7 mgs
Biotin 30-100 mcgs
Vitamin C: 500-2,000 mgs
Vitamin D: 400-600 IU's
Vitamin E: 200-400 IU's
Vitamin K: 160-300 mcgs
Minerals
Calcium:
1,000-1,500 mgs
Copper: 1.5-3.0 mgs
Chromium: 50-200 mcgs
Iron: 15-30 mgs
Magnesium: 300-500 mgs
Manganese: 2.5-5.0 mgs
Molybdenum: 75-250 mcgs
Potassium: 2,000-3,500 mgs
Selenium: 70-200 mcgs
Zinc: 15-50 mgs
You
may have noticed that some are missing, this
is because the amount is nothing to worry about,
as you will easily consume it in your diet,
in fact, even if you weren’t trying.
CALCIUM:
Why you should drink your milk. This is a "no-brainer",
Calcium builds strong bones and teeth. You may
not know it, but Calcium makes up about 2% of
your total body weight. That's 2 - 3 pounds
for an average adult. 98% of it is in your bones,
1% is in your teeth, and the last percent circulates
in your bloodstream. Calcium also regulates
your heartbeat, blood pressure, blood clotting
(important for people on steroids), contracting
your muscles, and sending messages down your
nerves. It also makes several different hormones
and enzymes, like the ones that control your
digestive system and how you use and make energy
from fats.
There are 206 bones in the human body, you need
all of them to be strong, especially if you
are training with weights and strength. Not
only this, but your bones get weaker as you
get older, after about 35 years old. Now, if
you are training, you need a lot of Calcium.
If you are training and taking steroids, you
need even more Calcium. Now, If you are training,
taking steroids, and taking thyroid medicine
(Synthroid for instance), you need even more
Calcium. You see, steroids and thyroid meds
rob your body of Calcium. Alcohol will also
do this, so you need to really watch your intake
of vitamins and minerals, alcohol will rob you
of most every vitamin and mineral in fact.
The daily intake should be around 1,000 mgs.
I myself, drink 3 - 4 gallons of milk per week,
I am quite sure I am getting my RDI, but if
you do not like milk or cannot drink it (can't
imagine that!!!), then you need to get it elsewhere.
If you like yogurt, it has more Calcium than
milk does, so make that smoothie every morning
for breakfast.
I am only going to give you 12 foods to get
calcium from since it is found in many foods.
All of these servings have 100mgs or more.
CALCIUM
IN FOOD AMOUNT CALCIUM IN MGS
Milk 8 oz 300
Yogurt, plain low fat 8 oz 415
American Cheese 1 oz 124
Cheddar Cheese 1 oz 204
Colby Cheese 1 oz 194
Cottage Cheese 1 cup 138
Mozzarella Cheese 1 oz 147
Swiss Cheese, processed 1 oz 272
Ricotta Cheese, part skim 1/2 cup 337
Pudding, instant choc. 1/2 cup 149
Spinach, cooked 1/2 cup 122
Salmon, with bones 3 oz 203
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MAGNESIUM:
This little mineral works with calcium in keeping
your bones strong. It also helps keep your blood
pressure down by making your muscles relax,
thus relaxing your heart and keeping the beat
at the right pace. It has also been noted to
make a difference in people with migraines,
asthma, and diabetes. Other vitamins work better
when you have plenty of Magnesium; Calcium and
Vitamin C for instance do their jobs better
with it. Magnesium and Calcium both are absorbed
in your bones and teeth, but like Calcium, some
Magnesium is left to circulate in your blood.
This amount of Calcium and Magnesium in your
blood is very important. As I said, calcium
makes your muscles "contract", Magnesium
makes them "relax" again, this signal
comes from your blood, otherwise, if that is
insufficient, your body will take it from your
bones as needed, thus weakening them. This is
also why it is very important to have plenty
of the other vitamins that promote good blood
cells and oxygen in your blood, as it carries
these vital substances where they need to go
more efficiently.
The amount of Magnesium you should take in per
day is around 400mgs - 600mgs. The DRI says
400mg, but the extra will help to keep your
BP down among other things. Remember, when you
are working out, your metabolism is higher and
you are burning, converting, and processing
a lot more and faster, so you need more.
MAGNESIUM IN FOOD AMOUNT MAGNESIUM IN MGS
Almonds, dry roasted 1 oz 84
Banana 1 medium 33
Black Beans 1 cup 121
Bread, whole wheat 1 slice 23
Broccoli, cooked 1/2 cup 19
Bread, white 1 slice 5
Cashews, dry roasted 1 oz 72
Chick peas 1 cup 78
Flounder 3 oz 50
Kidney beans 1 cup 80
Lentils 1 cup 71
Lima beans 1 cup 82
Milk, low fat 8 oz 34
Oatmeal, cooked 1 cup 56
Okra 1/2 cup 46
Peanut butter 2 tablespoons 51
Peanuts 1 oz 52
Peas 1/2 cup 31
Potato, baked w/ skins 1 medium 55
Shrimp 3 oz 29
Soy milk 1 cup 45
spinach, cooked 1/2 cup 79
Yogurt 8 oz 40
White beans 1 cup 113
If you take too much, you will only get diarrhea,
nothing bad. Magnesium is an ingredient in laxatives
and also in antacids.
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ZINC:
Zinc is essential for making the hormones that
control growth and for the important male hormone
testosterone.
Zinc
is very important for your immune system. In
fact, if you have a bad cold, taking extra zinc
could get you back on your feet several days
sooner. Zinc also helps you heal quickly from
wounds, keeps your skin healthy, helps preserve
your eyesight, and might even improve your memory.
It's no surprise that today many doctors and
nutritionists tell their patients to "think
zinc!"
Over
200 different enzymes in your body depend on
zinc to work properly. Here's just one example:
You need zinc to make the enzyme alcohol dehydrogenase,
which breaks down alcohol. If you're deficient
in zinc, your body can't process alcohol and
you get very drunk on just a small amount. You
also need zinc to make many hormones, including
the ones that tell your immune system what to
do when you're under attack from germs. Zinc
is essential for making the hormones that control
growth and for the important male hormone testosterone.
You have some zinc in every one of your body's
cells, but most of it is in your skin, hair,
nails, and eyes-and in your prostate gland if
you're male. All told, your body contains just
over 2.2 grams of zinc.
The
RDA for Zinc; Even though you use zinc in many
important body processes, you don't need to
eat much of it. Technically speaking, zinc is
a trace element, a mineral you need in only
very small amounts. The adult RDA for zinc is
15 mg a day or less, an amount that most everybody
easily gets from food. The first hint that zinc
is an important nutrient came almost a century
ago in Egypt, when doctors noticed that poor
young boys who ate almost nothing but unleavened
bread (bread without yeast, it was originally
stated to eat "unleavened" bread in
the time when Moses led the Israelites out of
Egypt. They were to eat unleavened bread for
7 days during which time the Passover took place.
No longer necessary since the birth of Jesus
Christ. Book of Exodus) were very short and
underdeveloped. It turned out that their diet
had very little zinc. Once they got more zinc
in their diet, they started growing normally
again.
In
our modern society, such a serious zinc deficiency
is very rare. A slight deficiency in zinc isn't
that uncommon. Surveys show that many women
get only about half the RDA. You might be on
the low side for zinc if: - You're a strict
vegetarian or vegan. Animal foods such as fish
and meat are the the best dietary sources of
zinc. Fruits have virtually none. Children who
don't eat animal foods are more at risk for
zinc deficiency. - You eat a very high-fiber
diet. The fiber, especially fiber from whole
grains, binds up the zinc in your diet and keeps
you from absorbing it. - You're pregnant or
breastfeeding. You're passing a lot of your
zinc on to your baby. If your diet is on the
low side for zinc to begin with, you might be
deficient. Talk to your doctor about supplements.
-You're over age 50. Your ability to absorb
zinc from your food drops as you get older.
- You abuse alcohol. Alcohol abusers don't eat
very well in general. Even moderate amounts
of alcohol flush out the zinc stored in your
liver and make you excrete the zinc stored in
your liver.
Zinc
deficiency has a number of symptoms: slowed
growth in children, slow wound healing, frequent
infections, skin irritations, hair loss, and
loss of your sense of taste. Generally speaking,
you don't have to worry much about being deficient
in this mineral. Anyone who eats a reasonably-
well-balanced diet will get plenty of zinc.
The
best food source of zinc by far is oysters.
There are about 12 mg in a single raw oyster.
Other foods that are good sources of zinc are
lean meat, poultry, and organ meats. You only
absorb about ten percent of the zinc you get
from animal foods, and you absorb even less
from the zinc in plant foods. There's a fair
amount of zinc in beans, nuts, seeds, whole
grains, but your body can't use it very well.
That's because these foods also have a lot of
fiber. A substance called phytic acid in the
fiber combines with zinc and keeps a lot of
it from being absorbed.
If
you're over the age of 40, your thymus may have
naturally shrunk quite a bit, so it's not producing
the hormones it used to-and those hormones stimulate
your body to produce infection-fighting blood
cells. Getting a little extra zinc-just 15 to
30 mg-every day may get your thymus moving again.
That means your immune system will work better
and fight off illness faster.
Are
the guys just kidding around when they tell
you to eat oysters for a better sex life? Believe
it or not, they're right. Oysters are by far
the food highest in zinc-and you need plenty
of zinc to make testosterone and other male
hormones. You also need zinc to make healthy
sperm and semen, so getting more zinc in your
diet could help solve male infertility. In one
study, men with low sperm counts took zinc supplements
for six weeks. Their testosterone levels and
sperm counts went up, and nearly half of them
had pregnant wives before the study was over.
Zinc can also be very helpful for treating and
possibly even preventing prostate problems.
Your prostate gland is a small organ that wraps
around the urethra at the neck of the bladder.
As you get older, your prostate often naturally
gets bigger, a condition called benign prostatic
hypertrophy (BPH).
The enlarged gland squeezes the urethra and
causes a need to go frequently (and also other
urination problems). Sometimes the problems
get so bad that medication or even surgery is
needed.
Finally, guys, despite rumors to the contrary,
zinc doesn't stop balding or restore lost hair.
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ELECTROLYTES:
Potassium, Sodium, and Chloride. These do many
things, but most of all, they control your blood
pressure. Too much sodium and too little Potassium
and you could get an unhealthy high blood pressure
level. On the same note, too much Potassium
and too little Sodium and your levels could
go way too low. Sodium, Potassium, and chloride
are Electrolytes. Electrolytes are minerals
that dissolve in water and are electrically
charged. Remember, our bodies are about 95%
water, so that means these Electrolytes travel
or conduct throughout your entire body, in the
cells, in the spaces between the cells, your
blood, lymph, and everywhere. Potassium and
Sodium particles have a positive charge and
Chloride particles are negatively charged. These
carry nutrients in and waste and excess water
out of your cells.
All of these Electrolytes maintain a balance
of water in your body, carry messages along
your nerves, help your muscles contract and
relax, and keep your PH levels under control.
Most of all, they are important in controlling
your blood pressure.
The daily intake (there is no RDA for them)
is about 2,000mgs of Potassium, 500mgs of Sodium,
and 750mgs of Chloride. These Electrolytes work
together, keeping your water level what it should
be (in your cells, blood, etc..). For example,
women, during their menstrual period get extra
hormone levels and thus get bloated and hold
extra water. People on steroids are getting
extra high hormone levels and do the same. To
remedy this, they take diuretics and herbs like
buchu and uva ursi. Doing this makes you excrete
water in your urine to reduce the amount in
your body, but the Electrolyte loss is directly
proportionate. Some diuretics are Dyrenium and
Lasix. Dyrenium will not effect your Potassium
levels, but Lasix will. Remember, too little
Potassium and your blood pressure could go up
and if you are taking steroids, your BP may
already be high. So, if you take Lasix (it is
one of the most common diuretics taken by steroid
users), then you should eat foods that are Potassium
rich.
Potassium
is found in almost everything you eat. Here
is a chart:
AVOCADO 1/2 MEDIUM 550
BANANA 1 MEDIUM 451
GROUND BEEF 3 OUNCES 205
BLACK BEANS 1 CUP 801
BROCCOLI, COOKED 1/2 CUP 228
CANTALOUPE 1 CUP 494
CARROT, RAW 1 MEDIUM 233
CHICKEN 3 OUNCES 195
CORN 1/2 CUP 204
KIWI 1 MEDIUM 252
MILK 8 OUNCES 381
ORANGE 1 MEDIUM 250
ORANGE JUICE 8 OUNCES 474
BAKED POTATO W/SKIN 1 MEDIUM 844
PRUNE JUICE 8 OUNCES 706
SPINACH, COOKED 1/2 CUP 419
STRAWBERRIES 1 CUP 247
TOMATO 1 MEDIUM 273
WATERMELON 1 CUP 186
WHEAT GERM 1/4 CUP 259
You should not need to take Potassium supplements
unless your doctor has said to do so.
Sodium is a touchy subject, take it, don't take
it, blah, blah, blah. The claim is that sodium
will raise your BP too high, but remember, there
is a balance between sodium and Potassium. So
if you are eating a lot of Sodium in your food
and not enough Potassium, that just might happen.
We probably do eat too much salt, there is enough
in food naturally to give us all we need, but
we add it to everything we eat. The balance
we should maintain is thus; five or six parts
Potassium to one part Sodium. Our normal diet
is probably around 1:2 right now. This tells
us we eat too much Sodium. Keeping a good balance
of Electrolytes will give you a healthier life,
heart, and less stress and tension.
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