Choline is a nutrient comparable to
vitamins in its importance for the body, and it plays a key role in
regulating cholesterol levels, maintaining brain and mental health, as
well as being a building block for cell membranes. Apart from that,
choline is crucial for brain development of children, which is why
pregnant and breastfeeding women, as well as young children, are often
required to monitor choline levels.
Like many other vitamins and nutrients, our
bodies naturally produce choline in our livers, but never in sufficient
amounts, which is why doctors recommend the following regulated daily
intake of choline for adults:
550 mg for men
425 mg for women
450 mg for women during pregnancy
55- mg for women during breastfeeding
Why is choline deficiency dangerous?
As we mentioned at the beginning of the
article, according to the National Health and Nutrition Examination
Survey, 90% of kids, pregnant women, and other adults aren’t meeting
their daily recommended intake of choline. But what does it mean for
their health?
Neurological disorders.
A low intake of
choline in adults has been associated with decreased memory, brain fog,
and cognition. Some researchers have even suggested that choline helps
maintain the structural integrity of neurons and so it may be beneficial
in supporting cognitive sharpness in older adults, particularly among
dementia and Alzheimer’s sufferers.
Finally, a choline deficit at an early age may result in
neurodevelopmental deficiencies, so sufficient choline intake is
particularly important for pregnant and breastfeeding women, as well as
infants and young kids.
Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD).
An adequate intake of choline
is essential for preventing liver damage and NAFLD, the most common
liver disease affecting the majority of overweight individuals and
patients with obesity. NAFLD is particularly dangerous, as it increases
one’s risk of liver cancer, liver failure, and cirrhosis quite
significantly. Choline helps prevent a fatty liver and is thus essential
for liver health.
Finally, there is also some recent scientific evidence suggesting
choline can be beneficial for the heart, as it can decrease the levels
of the bad kind of cholesterol in the blood, but there isn’t sufficient
proof to back that claim just yet.
Which foods contain choline?
With the exception of some cruciferous
vegetables and beans, choline-rich foods are limited to those that are
animal-derived, which is why persons who have a vegetarian or vegan
diet, as well as a low-cholesterol diet are more prone to be deficient
in choline.
The table above features several food types particularly rich in
choline, with liver, eggs, and red meat being some of the most
choline-dense food choices out there. If you’re following a
low-cholesterol diet as per the recommendations of your doctor, we
advise you to discuss the option of a choline supplement with your
health provider.
Supplementation is also an option to consider for vegans and
vegetarians, as choline is difficult to get from veggies only. For
example, these is roughly as much choline in 1 boiled egg (113 mg) as in
2 cups of broccoli (123 mg), which is less than a quarter of the
recommended intake per day for men.
In the end, what this story of mass choline deficiency can really teach
us all is that we shouldn't submit to dieting trends in a thoughtless
manner and have a balanced nutrient intake no matter what, even if means
supplementing.
This is only for your information, kindly take the advice of your doctor for medicines, exercises and so on.
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