Nutritionguides.net - Diet and Nutrition Facts for Healthy Living


Nutritionguides.net offers up to date information and articles on Nutrition, Diet and Healthy Living. Find posts on Diet and Nutrition and feel free to post your own Diet and Nutrition related comments.




Manganese

July 8th, 2005

Manganese activates many enzymes and vitamins in your body. It also helps to neutralize poisons in your blood. It helps in the production of such vital hormones as insulin. Manganese also works as an antioxidant to keep your cellular membranes healthy.

Vitamin C cannot work correctly without manganese. Enzymes are needed to direct vitamin C to detoxify the body, fight infection, build collagen, or perform one of its many other functions. Manganese encourages the production of these enzymes, without which vitamin C could not function. In fact, a study done on animals given no manganese showed that when given hydralazine (poison), they died. When manganese was supplemented in the diet and the animals were administered hydralazine, they lived. It is believed to be due to the detoxifying effect of vitamin C, that can only be put to use when there is adequate manganese to activate it.

Manganese activates arginase, which also has a detoxifying function in the body. Ammonia is a substance naturally produced by your body. The only problem is 1/1000 of a milligram of the stuff in a quart of your blood will kill you! Arginase helps to bind ammonia and carbon dioxide to make urea, which is harmless. The urea is filtered out of your blood by the kidneys and excreted as urine.

The specialized beta cells in your pancreas need manganese to manufacture insulin. No manganese, no insulin. Insulin is what moves sugar from your bloodstream to your cells. If you don’t get enough manganese, you could get a blood sugar disorder, like diabetes. An observation done on 122 diabetics and an identical control group showed diabetics to be twice as low in manganese than those without the disease.

Manganese activates choline, a phospholipid produced in the liver. Activated choline and ATP form acetyl choline. This compound functions as a neurotransmitter and works in the energy producing Krebs cycle. It also stimulates adrenaline and noradrenaline to be released from the adrenal glands. These hormones help you deal with stress.

Dopamine is a neurotransmitter and needs manganese to be produced. Sufferers of Parkinson’s disease have a decreased ability to produce dopamine. Additional manganese may help decrease the effects of the disease.

Entry Filed under: Vitamins & Minerals

Folate II Iodine

Leave a Comment

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Trackback this post  |  Subscribe to the comments via RSS Feed


Calendar

December 2008
M T W T F S S
« Jan    
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031  

Most Recent Posts