Contrary to my previous dismissive thoughts on the matter, vitamins and minerals are very, very important for your health and wellness.
They are key contributors to many processes that happen within your body: everything from breathing, digestion, muscle contraction, detoxification, energy production, learning, memory formation, growth, and repair all involve the use of vitamins and minerals.
Their primary purpose is to serve as cofactors for enzymes. Enzymes are proteins that catalyze, or speed up, the many chemical reactions that occur in the body. And enzymes enlist the help of cofactors to become even more effective at their job.
So imagine you were building a shelf, and you were provided a small screwdriver in the packaging. You can barely get a good grip on it, and it slips off the screw often. What a drag.
Screw it! You go and get yourself a power drill. This is your enzyme. It works a lot better, but you realize that you can attach a unique drill bit that’s a perfect fit for the screws you’re using. This is your cofactor.
What would originally take 2-3 hours in assembly now only takes 1 hour thanks to your handy tools! Extrapolate this simple example out to the billions of trillions of reactions occurring every second throughout your body, and you can clearly see that efficiencies really matter.
They can be the difference between a healthy body and a diseased one.
Given how essential these nutrients are to our wellbeing, nature (as well as the government) has ensured that our food, soil, and water supply contain the vitamins and minerals that you need so that it becomes an afterthought. Lucky aren’t ya?
You get your vitamins from food, and your body makes some of them too. Vitamins are organic compounds that come from plants and animals.
Minerals are inorganic elements that reside within the soil and water. Plants and animals consume these minerals, and then pass them on to humans. Except if you enjoy eating soil, which means you get it right from the source!
The amounts you require of each vitamin and mineral is dependent on your sex and the stage of life you are in. An elderly man, a teenage athlete, and a pregnant mother will all have their unique nutritional requirements.
All right…so how much do you need? It’s not the most helpful saying that everyone needs different amounts (although it’s mostly true). There is a more standardized measure that helps you know if you’re in the ballpark of getting what you need: the Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA).
The Institute of Medicine established the RDA for most vitamins and minerals by determining the minimum levels that prevent a deficiency for about 97.5% of healthy individuals in a given sex and age group.
Along with minimum levels, they also established the Tolerable Upper Intake Level (UL) for most vitamins and minerals, defined as the maximum daily dose unlikely to cause damage for the same 97.5% of the general healthy population.
If the Institute of Medicine doesn’t have enough data to establish an RDA, an Adequate Intake (AI) may be assigned, which estimates a safe and adequate daily amount that an individual may take.