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Minerals
Minerals are simple-structured substances that play major roles in many
metabolic functions. Many minerals are components of enzymes, which are
catalysts of chemical reactions in the body. Additionally, minerals regulate and
control the normal function of human and animal tissues, muscles, and organs.
For example, sodium and potassium play a vital role in maintaining proper fluid
balance. Calcium acts as a major structural component of bones and teeth. Iron
carries oxygen throughout the body in blood.
The importance
of minerals to good health has become increasingly important over the years
as the depletion of our soils. Taking any form of minerals does not ensure
that the minerals will be absorbed into the body and utilized by the
tissues.
The tissues of all living things are comprised primarily of four elements:
oxygen, hydrogen, carbon and nitrogen. These four are the major constituents of
fats, proteins, carbohydrates and water, the major compounds in plant and animal
tissue. When plant or animal tissue is burned, it releases gases. The ash is the
rest of the minerals that were present in the tissues.
Bones, teeth, nails, skin, hair and all other tissues require these minerals
for their formation. These same minerals also play important roles in the
function of the body, such as the production of energy and the control of body
systems. When any of the elements are lacking, the result will be structural
weakness and system dysfunction or, in other words, disease. The deficient
levels of a particular mineral may not mean that the mineral is deficient, but
rather that high levels of another mineral are depressing levels of another
mineral by interfering with its absorption.
Major Minerals: The tissue requires relatively large amounts of some minerals
such as calcium, magnesium, phosphorus, sodium, chloride, potassium, magnesium
and sulfur. These minerals needed in larger quantities are called
macro-minerals.
Trace Minerals: The remaining minerals that are essential for good health are
known as trace minerals, or micro-minerals. The trace elements generally
recognized as essential to good health are chromium, cobalt, copper, fluorine,
iodine, iron, manganese, molybdenum, nickel, selenium, silicon and zinc.
Since most people in today's hurried world don't have time to
eat regular nutritious meals, it is important to supplement our diet with
vitamins and minerals. It is especially important that we receive the highest
quality product in a form that will be quickly and easily absorbed. And it is
difficult to obtain the necessary vitamins and minerals from food because of
mineral-deficient soils that are common throughout the world today. It only
takes 10 years of intensive farming to exhaust the minerals in any tract of
land. The depletion of necessary nutrients by cooking and processing living
foods adds to the difficulty in obtaining vital minerals and vitamins from our
food. Severe vitamin deficiencies will result in serious illnesses. Even a
modest deficiency in certain vitamins, can have a profound effect on health. |
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