Vitamin A

This is a fat-soluble vitamin essential for vision, immune function, and cell growth. It exists in two primary forms: preformed vitamin A (retinol) found in animal products and provitamin A carotenoids (such as beta-carotene) found in plant-based foods.
Vitamin A RDA (Recommended Dietary Allowance):
- Men: 900 mcg/day (3,000 IU)
- Women: 700 mcg/day (2,333 IU)
- Pregnant women: 770 mcg/day (2,567 IU)
- Breastfeeding women: 1,300 mcg/day (4,333 IU)
ODA (Optimal Daily Allowance):
- 1,500-3,000 mcg/day (varies based on individual needs and health conditions)
Found in:
- Liver (beef, chicken)
- Fish (salmon, mackerel, tuna)
- Dairy products (cheese, butter, milk, eggs)
- Orange and yellow vegetables (carrots, sweet potatoes, pumpkin, butternut squash)
- Leafy greens (spinach, kale)
- Fruits (mangoes, apricots, cantaloupe)
Helps with:
- Maintaining healthy vision and preventing night blindness
- Supporting immune function and reducing infection risk
- Promoting healthy skin and cell growth
- Aiding in reproductive health
- Functioning as an antioxidant (beta-carotene form)
Insufficient doses:
- Night blindness and vision deterioration
- Increased susceptibility to infections
- Dry, scaly skin and delayed wound healing
- Growth retardation in children
- Impaired reproduction
Excessive doses:
- Toxicity (hypervitaminosis A) symptoms:
- Nausea, dizziness, and headaches
- Liver damage
- Bone pain and increased fracture risk
- Birth defects if consumed in excessive amounts during pregnancy
- Beta-carotene excess may cause harmless skin yellowing (carotenemia)
Types of Vitamin A:
- Retinol – Active form found in animal products
- Retinal – Essential for vision
- Retinoic acid – Important for skin and cell development
- Beta-carotene – A provitamin A carotenoid from plant sources that the body converts into active vitamin A
Interactions (synergy and anti):
- Synergy:
- Antagonistic interactions:
- Excess intake can interfere with vitamin D and K absorption, potentially leading to bone issues
- Alcohol increases the risk of liver toxicity when combined with high doses of vitamin A
- High doses of iron can reduce the levels of this vitamin