| LE Magazine March
2001

Vegetables Without
Vitamins
Imagine the surprise of going online and
discovering that the vitamin and mineral content of vegetables has
drastically dropped.
Thats what happened to nutritionist, Alex Jack, when he went
to check out the latest US Department of Agriculture food tables. The
stunning revelation came after Jack compared recently published
nutrient values with an old USDA handbook he had lying around. Some of
the differences in vitamin and mineral content were enormous-a 50%
drop in the amount of calcium in broccoli, for example. Watercress
down 88% in iron content; cauliflower down 40% in vitamin C
content-all since 1975.
Jack
took his findings to the USDA, hoping for a reasonable explanation.
That was two years ago. Hes still waiting. So is
Organic Gardening magazine,
which published an open letter, seeking an explanation from Dan
Glickman, Secretary of Agriculture. Glickman didnt respond, but
USDA employee, Phyllis E. Johnson did. Johnson (who is head of the
Beltsville area office), suggested to Organic
Gardening that the nutrient drain should be put in context.
According to her, the 78% decrease in calcium content of corn is not
significant because no one eats corn for calcium.
She further explains that the problem may not even exist at all; that
the apparent nutrient dips could be due to the testing procedures. For
example, changes in the publics perception of what the
edible portion is may determine what parts have been analyzed over
time. In other words, back when the old food tables were made
up, people may have been eating the cobb too, so they got more
nutrients. The
vitamin drain
We
decided to look into this further. Jack had used a 1975 version of the
food tables for his research. We dredged up a 1963 version. After
comparing the nutrient values for over a dozen fruits and vegetables,
it was clear that the nutrient value of many foods has dropped, in
some cases drastically. For example, the amount of vitamin C in sweet
peppers has plummeted from 128 mg to 89 mg.= The vitamin A in apples
has dropped from 90 mg to 53 mg. The fall-offs seem to be limited
mostly to vegetables, and some fruits.
Some vegetables appear to be gaining vitamins-at
least vitamin A. Carrots, for example, have more of the vitamin now
than they did in 1963. Why is a mystery. But the phenomenon has
apparently occurred just in the nick of time. The National Academy of
Sciences has issued an alert that it takes twice as many vegetables to
get the daily requirement of vitamin A as previously thought. Carrots
and pumpkin are exempt from the caveat.
Despite
the apparent increase of vitamin A in carrots, most vegetables are
losing their vitamins and minerals. Nearly half the calcium and
vitamin A in broccoli, for example, have disappeared. Collards are not
the greens they used to be. If you're eating them for minerals and
vitamin A, be aware that the vitamin A content has fallen from 6500
IUs to 3800 IUs. Their potassium has dropped from from 400 mg to 170
mg. Magnesium has fallen sharply-57 mg to 9. Cauliflower has lost
almost half its vitamin C, along with its thiamin and riboflavin. Most
of the calcium in pineapple is gone-from 17 mg (per 100 grams raw) to
7. And the list goes on and on.
The USDA refuses to act
Whats the deal on this nutrient drain? We
decided to ask USDA ourselves, so we contacted the head of the USDA
Agricultural Research Service, whose job it is to track the vitamins
in food, among other things. Mr. Edward B. Knipling responded to our
inquiry with a restatement of Ms. Johnsons letter to
Organic Gardening
magazine. So we pressed for a better answer. Isnt the agency
concerned that Americans may not be getting the vitamins they think
they are? What about the food pyramid? Wont a nutrient drain
upset the pyramid? Already the National Academy of Sciences is telling
us our vegetables don't have as many vitamins as they're supposed to.
Will the USDA double the required servings of vegetables to make up
for the vitamin loss? So far, no answer from the agency.
 The
question is, what is the nature and extent of the problem? Vegetables
are a major source of nutrition. Without them, humans miss out on
important vitamins, minerals and phytonutrients. Many nutrients (such
as folate) werent measured in the past. If they are also
disappearing, the extent is unknown. What about more exotic nutrients
such as flavonoids, or compounds like I3C? These arent tracked
by the USDA. Are they disappearing also?
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90% of women and 71% of
men get less than the RDA for vitamin B6. Dietary
vitamin B-6 intake and food sources in the US population:
NHANES II, 1976-1980. Kant AK,
et al. 1990.
Men with the lowest
amount of vitamin C have a 62% increased risk of cancer and a
57% increased risk of dying from any cause. Vitamin C
status and mortality in US adults.
Loria CM, et al. Am J Clin Nutr
72:139-45, 2000.
Lutein and zeaxanthin
reduce the incidence of cataract by 22%. A prospective
study of carotenoid and vitamin A intakes and risk of cataract
extraction in US women. Chasan-Taber
L, et al. Am J Clin Nutr 70:509-16, 1999.
People with low levels of
retinol, beta-carotene, vitamin E and selenium are more likely
to get cancer. Serum retinol, beta-carotene, vitamin E
and selenium as related to subsequent cancer of specific
sites. Comstock GW, et al. Am
J Epidemiol 135:115-21, 1992.
Supplemental vitamin D
reduces the risk of colon cancer by half compared to dietary
vitamin D which reduces it 12%. Calcium, vitamin D, and
dairy foods and the occurrence of colon cancer in men.
Kearney J, et al. Am J Epidemiol
143:907-17, 1996.
The area of China with
the lowest micronutrient intake has the highest rate of
cancer. Supplementation with vitamin E, selenium and
beta-carotene lowers the rate. Vitamin/mineral
supplementation and cancer risk: internationaal
chemoprevention trials. Blot
WJ. Proc Soc Exp Biol Med 216:291-6, 1997.
American children have
inadequate levels of vitamin E. Vitamin E status of US
children. Bendich A. J Am Coll
Nutr 11:441-4, 1992.
Flavonoids protect
against stroke. Dietary flavnoids, antioxidant vitamins,
and incidence of stroke: the Zutphen study.
Keli SO, et al. Arch Intern Med
156:637-42, 1996. |
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Whats for dinner
The USDA advises that we should be eating 3 to 5
servings of vegetables plus 2 to 4 servings of fruit a day to maintain
health. (A serving is one cup of something raw and leafy or one-half a
cup of something either not leafy or cooked-or 3/4 cup of vegetable
juice). That is potentially 9 cups of vegetables and fruit a day. Thats
a lot of lettuce. Are people doing this?
Harry Balzer is vice president of NPD Group, a firm
that gathers information on the eating habits of Americans. His data
says no way. According to him, the preferred American meal is
one-dish, already prepared. Unless a vegetable can be squirted out of
a bottle, its a nonentity. Why? Were in a hurry.
Vegetables are considered side dishes, and Americans dont have
time for such frivolity. The decline is relentless. Within the last 15
years, the percentage of all dinners including a vegetable (other than
salad or potatoes) dropped 10%. Its now 41%.
This raises a big question. If people are not
eating their vegetables, how are they getting their vitamins? The
answer is theyre not. Study-after-study show that Americans dont
meet the RDAs for many nutrients. Thats not good considering
that RDAs are probably too low to keep most people in optimal health
to begin with. Americans know
what they should be eating. Theyre just not doing it. And theyre
not likely to. According to Balzer, for example, pizza is one of
Americas favorite meals. It fulfills, he says, the American
ideal of being easy and fast, liked by old and young, and easy to
clean up. If you blot it with a paper towel, throw on some pineapple,
and use your imagination, it even seems to fit with the food pyramid.
What else are people eating? Bread, doughnuts, pasta, cheese, beef and
milk. Without fortified cereal, Americans would not come close to
meeting RDAs. Yes, but what about
the produce section? Isnt it filled with resealable bags full of
wholesome, scrubbed little carrots, prewashed salad greens and
spinach? Somebody must be buying them, or they wouldnt be there,
right? According to Balzer, those puppies are highly successful,
raking in a billion dollars in sales ($100M is considered successful
for a new food product). But the fact that people are buying them
doesnt mean theyre eating them. The reality is that onions
are most-often served vegetable in America. Tomatoes (including
ketchup) are second. According to
one study, less than one-third of Americans get the minimum five
servings of fruits and vegetables a day, let alone the recommended
nine. According to Balzers data, the percentage of Americans who
buy healthy groceries is about 10%. The other 90% relies on ketchup,
onions, fat-free snacks, ice cream, cheese and Sweet Tarts as
their source of nutrition. Now we find out that even if a person
accidentally eats a vegetable, it may not contain the nutrients its
supposed to. What can a person do?
Vitamin supplements work
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"...the nutritional
content of produce is not as important as things like appearance
and big yield. In other words, the view of commercial growers is
that food is a product in the same way that running shoes are a
product. Looks are more important than substance."
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Supplements have proven their worth in scientific studies. Cancer,
heart attacks, bone loss, stroke and macular degeneration-most any
degenerative disease you can think of can either be prevented by, or
ameliorated by, the right nutrients given in supplement form. Over the
long term, the benefits can really add up. For example, nurses who
took multi-vitamins containing folic acid for fifteen years slashed
their risk of colon cancer by 75%. Folate from food didnt work
as well. No one knows why, although bioavailability problems may be to
blame. Its estimated that about 90% of the population gets less
folate per day than necessary for health (400 micrograms).
In the same study, nurses who took multi-vitamins
containing vitamin B6 reduced their risk of heart disease by 30%. The
more B6 they took, the lower the risk. Could a high potency, high
quality supplement reduce risk even more? We dont know, but a
study from Norway shows that a combination of vitamin B6 and folate
reduces homocysteine 32% within five weeks in healthy individuals.
This has the potential to significantly lower the risk of heart attack
and stroke. Other studies show that for every decade of life, plasma
concentrations of B6 decrease, and that people who take supplements
have a much greater chance of meeting RDAs than those who dont.
There are good reasons to take supplements. The
bioavailability of the nutrients in supplements (assuming you buy
high-quality) is 100% compared to food which is very unpredictible
when it comes to bioavailability. Nutrient content also appears
unpredictible. If the vitamin drain is confirmed, it will mean that
people cannot count on vegetables and fruit to be the packages of
concentrated nutrients theyre supposed to be. In a time when
most people arent coming close to getting five, let alone nine,
servings of fruits and vegetables, it seems pointless to ask them to
eat more to get the same nutrients.
The USDA is apparently unconcerned and not interested in the vitamin
drain, despite its mandate to ensure high quality safe foods. In her
letter to Organic Gardening, Ms. Johnson said that the nutritional
content of produce is not as important as things like appearance and
big yield. In other words, Ms. Johnson espouses the view of commercial
growers that food is a product in the same way that running shoes are
a product. Looks are more important than substance. That view of
vegetables and fruits reduces your spinach salad to pretty roughage,
and your chances of meeting RDAs to slim.
The USDA can be accessed at
www.usda.gov.
The food tables are available online.
The folks who do the food testing are in the
Agricultural Research Service which can be accessed at
www.ars.usda.gov.
*1963 values have been set
at 100%
References
Cleveland LE, et al. 2000.
Dietary intake of whole grains. J Am Coll Nutr 19 (3
Suppl):331S-38S. Composition
of Foods (Raw, Processed, Prepared): Agriculture Handbook No. 8.
USDA Agricultural Research Service. 1963.
Cuskelly GJ, et al. 1996. Effect of increasing
dietary folate on red-cell folate: implications for prevention of
neural tube defects. Lancet 347:657-9.
Giovannucci E, et al. 1998. Multivitamin use,
folate and colon cancer in women in the nurses health study.
Ann Intern Med 129:517-24. Manore
MM, et al. 1989. Plasma pyridoxal 5-phosphate concentration
and dietary vitamin B-6 intake in free-living, low-income elderly
people. Am J Clin Nutr 50:339-45.
Mansoor MA, et al. 1999. Plasma total
homocysteine response to oral doses of folic acid and pyridoxine
hydrochloride (vitamin B6) in healthy individuals. Oral doses of
vitamin B6 reduce concentrations of serum folate. Scand J Clin Lab
Invest 59:139-46. NPD Group, Inc.
has a website at www.npd.com. Highlights from the 15th Annual Report
on Eating Patterns in America are available online.
Organic Gardenings letter to Dan Glickman,
and the response of Phyllis E. Johnson of the USDA - see
www.organicgardening.com. Rimm
EB, et al. 1998. Folate and Vitamin B6 from diet and supplements
in relation to risk of coronary heart disease among women. JAMA
279:359-64. Rose CS, et al. 1976.
Age differences in vitamin B6 status of 617 men. Am J Clin
Nutr 29:847-53. Subar AF, et al.
1998. Dietary sources of nutrients among US adults, 1989 to
1991. J Am Diet Assoc 98:537-47.
Subar AF, et al. 1989. Folate intake and food sources in the US
population. Am J Clin Nutr 50:508-16.
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