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Special K
It’s
green, it’s valuable, and it can vastly
improve your quality of living.
One more hint: It’s not money.
No, this stuff actually does grow on trees.
It’s called Vitamin K and although you don’t
hear about it as often as the standard
A-through-E vitamins, researchers are
discovering more and more of its invaluable
functions.
Vitamin K will provide you with health
rather than wealth, but there’s no mistaking
that it’s loaded with benefits. Aside from
its many already proven functions,
researchers now believe that Vitamin K
prevents osteoporosis, the disease that
weakens the bones, a function that until now
seemed primarily in calcium’s hands.
The fat-soluble vitamin is essential for
many suffering health problems, particularly
those experiencing birth complications or
bleeding disorders. Vitamin K has been
linked to growth and development of the
new-born and has also aided those with
intestinal malfunctions and those who suffer
frequent nosebleeds and excessive bleeding.
Everybody needs Vitamin K in his or her
system. Deficiency in this vitamin will
effect the development process of infants,
leading to problems like Hemorrhagic
disease, which is characterized by abnormal
bleeding through the intestines or umbilical
cord.
In adults, these deficiencies lead to severe
blood clotting, particularly in the stomach,
and can lead to considerable intestinal
complications.
Vitamin K is most commonly found in green
leaf-like sources like spinach, green tea,
cabbage, turnip greens, and brussels
sprouts. Others like alfalfa, soybeans,
cheddar cheese, oats, and cauliflower are
also rich on the vitamin. So if you’re a big
salad eater, chances are that you’re getting
a very healthy dose of Vitamin K.
But overdoses in Vitamin K, which are
extremely rare, have been linked to brain
damage in infants and liver malfunctions in
adults.
Aside from the aforementioned natural
sources, Vitamin K is also available in
tablets and should be taken with meals or an
hour after completion of a meal.
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