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  2. Vitamin A deficiency - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vitamin_A_Deficiency

    Consumption of yellow-orange fruits and vegetables rich in carotenoids, specifically beta-carotene, provides provitamin A precursors that can prevent VAD-related night blindness. However, the conversion of carotene to retinol varies from person to person and bioavailability of carotene in food varies. [15] [16]

  3. Xerophthalmia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xerophthalmia

    Estimates are that each year there are 350,000 cases of childhood blindness due to vitamin A deficiency. [5] The causes are vitamin A deficiency during pregnancy, followed by low transfer of vitamin A during lactation and infant/child diets low in vitamin A or beta-carotene.

  4. Vitamin A - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vitamin_A

    Also downregulated is the enzyme beta-carotene 15,15'-dioxygenase (formerly known as beta-carotene 15,15'-monooxygenase) coded for by the BCMO1 gene, responsible for symmetrically cleaving β-carotene into retinal. [8] Absorbed β-carotene is either incorporated as such into chylomicrons or first converted to retinal and then retinol, bound to ...

  5. Vitamin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vitamin

    night blindness, hyperkeratosis, and keratomalacia [12] hypervitaminosis A: from animal origin as vitamin A / all-trans-retinol: fish in general, liver and dairy products; from plant origin as provitamin A / all-trans-beta-carotene: orange, ripe yellow fruits, leafy vegetables, carrots, pumpkin, squash, spinach B B 1

  6. β-Carotene - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Β-Carotene

    β-Carotene (beta-carotene) is an organic, strongly colored red-orange pigment abundant in fungi, [7] plants, and fruits. It is a member of the carotenes , which are terpenoids (isoprenoids), synthesized biochemically from eight isoprene units and thus having 40 carbons .

  7. Vitamin deficiency - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vitamin_deficiency

    When eaten, beta-carotene is a provitamin, converted to retinol (vitamin A). The concept is that in areas of the world where vitamin A deficiency is common , growing and eating this rice would reduce the rates of vitamin A deficiency, particularly its effect on childhood vision problems. [ 54 ]

  8. Retinol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Retinol

    Retinol, also called vitamin A 1, is a fat-soluble vitamin in the vitamin A family that is found in food and used as a dietary supplement. [3] Retinol or other forms of vitamin A are needed for vision, cellular development, maintenance of skin and mucous membranes, immune function and reproductive development. [3]

  9. Macular degeneration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macular_degeneration

    The specific vitamins and minerals in AREDS-1 are vitamin C (500 mg), zinc (80 mg), vitamin E (400 IU), copper (2 mg) and beta-carotene (15 mg). In the AREDS-2 formulation, lutein (10 mg) and zeaxanthin (2 mg) replaced beta-carotene due to the risk of lung cancer in smokers taking beta-carotene. [ 2 ]