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CHOLINE
General - water-soluble;
- Choline can be produced in the body if diet contains sufficient protein;
- Choline precursor is the essential amino acid methionine;
- A key component of lecithin;
- History: synthesized in 1866; identified as factor preventing fat accumulation in liver of dogs in
1937; biosynthesis pathway identified in 1941; route for incorporation into lecithin identified in
1956;
Nutrition
- Sources: lecithin, egg yolks, soy beans, liver, fish, whole grains, legumes, fatty natural foods,
cauliflower, cabbage;
- Supplements: lipotropics, B-complex, multi-vitamin, multi-mineral-vitamin formulations;
- Absorption: from duodenum & along entire small intestine;
- Storage: higher quantities found in liver; distributed throughout body in cell membranes;
- Metabolism: choline forms 10% of lecithin; synthesized from methionine, with help of B-12 &
folic acid; carbohydrate loading increases liver triglyceride synthesis & increases need for
choline-containing lipoprotein envelopes; increased choline necessary during periods of rapid
growth (infancy);
- Interactions: tricyclic anti-depressants, anti-histamines & anti-spasmodics interfere with
acetylcholine function & short-term memory;
Functions of choline
- Main function is probably to make methyl groups available for biological reactions;
- Part of lecithin (phosphatidylcholine) molecule, important component of all membranes & main
emulsifier (mixing oil & water) in body;
- Part of the acetylcholine molecule, an important neurotransmitter;
- Participates primarily in the metabolism of fats & nerve tissue;
- Prevents deposition of fats in liver; essential for liver & kidney function;
- Involved in: digestion, synthesis & transport of fats to cell membranes in all tissues; metabolism
of fats in bloodstream & kidneys;
- Probably releases carnitine (required for fat metabolism) from tissue storage; other methyl donors
(betaine, methionine, sarcosine) cannot do this;
- Provides methyl groups for carnitine synthesis (made from trimethyl-lysine);
- Keeps gall bladder cholesterol in solution, preventing formation of gall stones;
- Vital for synthesis of neurotransmitter acetylcholine; maintains integrity of myelin sheath
surrounding nerves;
- Donates methyl groups (CH3) to make methionine from (toxic) homocysteine, betaine (that stores
methyl groups), dimethylglycine (B-15) a metabolic intermediate & other biological reactions;
- May aid in hormone production;
Quantities
- Measurement: in milligrams;
- Optimum: (SONA) average not yet established
- Individual optimum needs to be individually determined;
- Minimum: (RDI) 500 mg/day; choline is beneficial, but not an essential nutrient; can be made
from amino acid serine (B-6 required);
- Deficiency from lack of dietary lecithin, choline or precursor amino acid methionine;
- Symptoms include: fatty infiltration of liver (steatosis) & damage to liver cells (cirrhosis),
nephritis, kidney damage, atherosclerosis, arteriosclerosis & stomach ulcerations; loss of
shortterm memory;
- Toxicity: “fishy” smell from choline ingestion results from bacteria in gut; choline may cause
depression in a few people;
Therapy with choline
- 500 to 2,000 mg/day may be used
- Fat-solubilizing;
- Patients on intravenous (i.v.) may require choline as part of i.v. nutrient formulation;
- Oral administration of choline reduces high blood pressure slightly (may increase vagal tone,
dilating arterioles); intravenous choline lowers blood pressure slightly;
- May help improve kidney function
- May help prevent (but not reverse) Alzheimer’s disease;
- Improves short-term memory in some people;
- Helpful in treating tardive dyskinesia, a side effect of anti-psychotic medications;
- May help in Parkinson’s disease, Huntington’s disease, Tourette’s syndrome; Friedreich’s ataxia;
- 1,000 - 1,500 mg/day controls manic symptoms in lithium-resistant manic-depressive disorder;
- Reduces heart palpitations, dizziness, headaches, ear noises, constipation within 10 days
(anecdotal); improves insomnia, visual disturbances, blood flow to eyes (anecdotal);
- More than doubled 3-year survival rate of patients hospitalized for atherosclerosis;
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