| |
VITAMIN E (Tocopherol)
General - oil-soluble; anti-sterility factor; oil-soluble antioxidant;
- Vitamin E is the official designation for alpha tocopherol, a fat-soluble nutrient found in the diet
in varying amounts. Until recently it was thought that alpha tocopherol was the most active
tocopherol and as such only official vitamin E activity (IU) is given to alpha tocopherol.
- The term vitamin E is now used to refer to all tocol and trienal derivatives. The tocols are alpha,
beta, delta and gamma tocopherol, and the trienals are alpha, beta, delta and gamma tocotrienol.
- Gamma tocopherol, a potent antioxidant of ozone and nitric oxide is now shown to be as
important as alpha tocopherol. The National Academy of Sciences now suggests that vitamin E
formulas contain both tocopherols and that gamma tocopherol be the predominant one.
- Tocotrienols have potent anti-oxidant activity, but their turnover rate in human tissues is rapid and
therefore unlikely to provide more than transitory effect, and little benefit as a nutritional
supplement.
- Vitamin E esters such as alpha tocopheryl acetate and alpha tocopheryl succinate are not antioxidants
in that form and must first be enzymatically de-esterified in the gut to the biologically
active tocopherols before they function in the human system. This is an inefficient process and
and more than 50% of the ester may not be converted.
- History: “anti-sterility factor” described in 1911; isolated in 1936; identified in 1938; recognized
as essential for humans in 1968; deficiency syndrome described in 1977;
Nutrition
- Sources: wheat germ, wheat germ oil, whole grain, unrefined vegetable oil, nuts, seeds, eggs,
whole grains, green leafy vegetables;
- Supplements: “dry” E acetate or succinate, d-alpha tocopherol, gamma/alpha tocopherols, multivitamin,
multi-mineral-vitamin formulations;
- Absorption from small intestine, along with fats; 40 to 60% is absorbed into lymph (in
chylomicrons); remainder is discarded in feces;
- Improved by: edible fats & oils; by taking with a meal; vitamin C prevents its oxidation; vitamin
A aids in transport; manganese & selenium;
- Antagonized by: salts & sugar/acid chelates of iron & copper (oxides, carbonates, gluconates,
succinates, acetates, etc.); oxygen; rancid food oils; processed foods; mineral oil; oral
contraceptives; freezing; oxidizing agents, ozone & nitrogen oxides;
- Stability: destroyed by light & oxygen; heat-stable in boiling, but destroyed during frying & deep
frying; some lost in frozen storage; storage at room temperature may decrease vitamin E content
of foods by up to 50% within 2 weeks; encapsulation protects vitamin E against destruction;
- Storage: largely in adipose tissue, liver & muscle; high concentrations also found in blood
platelets, pituitary, adrenals, testes, ovaries;
- Metabolism: plasma levels drop to half within a few days when vitamin E is withdrawn from
foods; frank deficiency may take several months to develop;
Functions of vitamin E
- Chief activity in all cells & tissues is anti-oxidant; prevents oxygen from destroying many other
compounds, including vitamin A & C, unsaturated fatty acids & membranes (phospholipids);
(Note: oxygen is vital to cell respiration, but will damage cells if antioxidants fail to keep it under
control);
- Vital to digestion & metabolism of unsaturated fats; Protects cells from damaging pollutants,
peroxides & free radicals formed from organic molecules during normal metabolic processes;
protects lungs against air pollution;
- Protects membrane integrity of cells in circulatory, digestive, respiratory, excretory & nervous
systems; protects vitamin A against destruction by free radicals;
- Stimulates development & tone of skeletal, heart & digestive tract muscles;
- Retards aging processes of cells; prolongs life of red blood cells;
- Vitamin E & C reduces the formation of nitrosamines (carcinogen) in bacon;
- Gamma tocopherol plays a critical role in the defence against cancer and cardiovascular disease
by inhibiting the process of inflammation more effectively that alpha tocopherol.
Quantities
- Measurement: 1 mg d-alpha tocopherol = 1.49 International Units (IU);
1 mg dl-alpha tocopheryl acetate = 1 IU = 1 tocopherol equivalent (TE);
- Optimum: (SONA) average ranges from 70 to 800 IU; increases with amount of unsaturated fatty
acids in diet; high intake of unsaturated fats increases the rate of oxidative destruction of vitamin
E, which sacrifices itself to spare fat & membranes;
- Individual optimum must be determined for each individual;
- Minimum: (DRI) average is set at 15 mg (22 IU);
- Less than RDA: estimated at 20 - 40% of population, due to reliance on processed foods;
- Deficiency from: insufficient intake; poor absorption (inflammatory bowel disease, cystic
fibrosis, premature birth); lack of fats in diet; mineral oil; iron & copper salts; injury & tissue
destruction, which rapidly use up body’s supplies; rancid oils; increased requirement (premature
infants, pregnant & lactating women); - intake of vitamin E from foods has fallen 95% since 1900,
due to removal during food processing; deficiency is widespread in un-supplemented diets;
- Symptoms include: formation of peroxides, dienes & free radicals within cells, formed by
oxidation of membrane fats & of soluble factors in cell cytoplasm; rupture of cell membranes;
destruction or irreparable damage to nearby cells by substances spilling from ruptured cells;
damage transmitted to future generations of cells; shortened red blood cell life; production of age
pigment spots (ceroid pigments; lipofuscin);
- First clinical signs of deficiency: ruptured red blood cells (haemolysis), followed by abnormal
deposits of fat in heart & muscles, shrinkage of connective tissues &/or muscle degeneration;
- Prolonged deficiency impairs absorption of fat & fat soluble vitamins, can lead to degeneration
of the testes in men; nephritis from kidney tubule blockage by dead cells; blockage of bile duct;
chronic pancreatitis; chronic gastrointestinal disorders; thrombotic conditions of the
cardiovascular system; infertility in men & women; progressive neuro-muscular disease in
children & adults (nutritional muscular dystrophy); formation of age pigments (lipofuscin);
vitamin E deficiency anaemia from oxidative destruction of red blood cells; premature infants
especially at risk — haemolytic anaemia, intraventricular haemorrhage, retrolenticular fibroplasias
that can lead to blindness;
- Toxicity: virtually impossible to overdose on vitamin E; 200 times RDA (up to 3,000 IU/day) is
safe for most people;
- Very high intake may increase bleeding tendency in patients on anti-coagulant drugs;
- Extreme supplementation may increase blood pressure in some people; hypertensive individuals
start with low quantities & increase by 100 IU/week;
- Persons with rheumatic heart conditions may have to limit vitamin E intake to 150 IU/day;
supervision by nutritionally competent health care professional is recommended;
Therapy with vitamin E
- 100-1,600 IU/day is usual therapeutic range; up to 3,200 IU/day used in menopause;
- Corrects the foregoing deficiency conditions if degeneration of the tissue has not progressed to
irreparable damage;
- Reverses nutritional muscular dystrophy;
- Protects brain & nerves, muscles, heart & arteries, glands & reproductive organs from oxidative
damage throughout life;
- Russian athletes use up to 150 IU/2-hour training to spare oxygen & promote endurance;
- Improves varicose veins, inflamed veins with blood clots (thrombophlebitis) & intermittent
claudication; soothes dry itchy skin; regulates menstrual flow; prevents & alleviates some
migraine headaches; prevents miscarriages;
- Protects lungs from damage due to smog; retards aging; preventive against cancer & heart disease,
as well as general degeneration;
- Up to 100 IU/day used in premature infants, to protect cell membranes in brain, nerves, heart &
muscles from oxidative destruction; to prevent blindness & brain damage;
- Cystic fibrosis requires 400 IU/day or more because of poor absorption;
- Topical use as anti-inflammatory agent, in cosmetics, to heal wounds & to protect skin against UV& other damage; retard skin aging;
- Gamma tocopherol may inhibit prostate cancer & lung cancer.
|
|