How Nutrients Work Together
Dr. Bland reports, vitamins and minerals help regulate the
conversion of food to energy in the body, and can be separated into two general categories:
-
energy nutrients,
which are principally involved in the conversion of food to energy,
-
protector nutrients, which help defend against damaging toxins
derived from drugs, alcohol, radiation, environmental pollutants, or
the body's own enzyme
processes.
Dr. Bland says, the B-complex vitamins and magnesium are
energy nutrients, for they
activate specific metabolic facilitators called enzymes, which
control digestion and the absorption and use of proteins, fats, and
carbohydrates. These nutrients often work as a team, their mutual
presence enhancing the other's function.
In the process of converting food to energy,
oxygen-free radicals are produced that can damage the body and set
the stage for degenerative diseases, including arthritis, heart
disease, certain forms of cancer, and premature aging. Protector
nutrients such as vitamin E, beta-carotene (a close relative of
vitamin A), vitamin C, and the minerals zinc, copper, manganese, and
selenium, play a critical role in preventing or delaying these
degenerative processes. Vitamins E, A, and C work together as a team,
protecting against breakdown and helping each other maintain
adequate tissue levels.
Dr. Berkson notes that vitamins and minerals are
what make the chemical and electrical circuitry of the body work,
and that the body's functioning is therefore profoundly affected by
how nutrients either work together or against each other. Nutrients
can help each other or inhibit each other when taken simultaneously.
For example, iron is best absorbed when taken separately from
pancreatic enzymes and should also not be taken with vitamin E. There are also certain nutrients that can help "potentiate"
the other nutrients. For example, vitamin C taken with iron provides
the maximum absorption of the iron.