The term ' minerals ' refers to elements in their simple inorganic
form. In nutrition they are commonly referred to as mineral elements
or inorganic nutrients.
Minerals are vital to health. Like vitamins and amino acids, minerals
are essential for regulating and building the trillions of living
cells which make up the body. Body cells receive the essential food
elements through the blood stream. They must, therefore, be properly
nourished with an adequate supply of all the essential minerals
for the efficient functioning of the body.
Minerals help maintain the volume of water necessary to life processes
in the body. They help draw chemical substances into and out of
the cells and they keep the blood and tissue fluid from becoming
either too acidic or too alkaline. The importance of minerals, like
vitamins, is illustrated by the fact that there are over 50,000
enzymes in the body which direct growth and energy and each enzyme
has minerals and vitamins associated with it. Each of the essential
food minerals does a specific job in the body and some of them do
extra work, in teams, to keep body cells healthy. The mineral elements
which are needed by the body in substantial amounts are calcium,
phosphorous, iron, sulphur, magnesium, sodium, potassium and chlorine.
In addition the body needs minute (trace) amounts of iodine, copper,
cobalt, manganese, zinc, seleminum, silicon, flourine and some others.
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