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Diseases and Conditions Encyclopedia

 

vitamin B2

 

Overview

Riboflavin, also called Vitamin B2, is a water-soluble vitamin. It is one of the eight B vitamins. The B vitamin complex includes vitamins B1, niacin, B6, B12, folate, biotin, and pantothenic acid.

 

What food source is the nutrient found in?

Good sources of riboflavin include:

 milk and dairy products
 meat and eggs
 leafy, dark green vegetables
 whole-grain or enriched breads and cereals
 organ meats such as liver, kidney, and heart

 

In the United States, milk products supply about half of the riboflavin that people get. Ultraviolet light, such as sunlight, destroys riboflavin. This is why milk is stored in opaque plastic or cardboard containers. Unlike other vitamins, riboflavin is not destroyed by cooking.

 

However, when grains are milled, or refined, most of the riboflavin and other nutrients are removed. This makes whole-grain foods, such as oatmeal and whole wheat, better choices. Enriched refined foods are also healthy choices because the riboflavin lost in refining has been added back in. Refined - but non-enriched foods, such as white rice, do not supply riboflavin in any significant amount. The content of riboflavin in some common foods is as follows:

 1 cup of milk = 0.4 milligram (mg)
 1 cup of cottage cheese = 0.37 mg
 1 cup of yogurt = 1.6 mg
 3-ounce pork chop = 0.24 mg
 3 ounces of beef liver, braised = 3.5 mg

 

How does the nutrient affect the body?

Riboflavin helps keep the body healthy in a number of ways, including the following:

 It helps to convert food into energy.
 It is also needed to convert an amino acid called tryptophan into niacin.
 It works closely with other B vitamins.
 It helps make red blood cells and it keeps body tissues healthy, especially the skin and eyes.
 It is key to healthy growth and development.
 It helps the body make and control certain hormones.

 

The recommended daily allowances, called RDAs, for this nutrient are:

 adult men from age 19 to 50: 1.7 milligrams (mg)
 men older than age 50: 1.4 mg
 adult women from age 19 to 50: 1.3 mg
 women older than age 50: 1.2 mg
 pregnant women: 1.6 mg
 breastfeeding women: 1.8 mg during the first six months and 1.7 mg the next six months after the baby's birth

 

Several servings per day of riboflavin-rich foods are needed to meet requirements. Because riboflavin is found in so many foods, a balanced diet will usually provide enough.

 

Information

Because riboflavin is so key to health, a shortage in the diet can cause problems. Severe riboflavin deficiency with clinical symptoms is rare. Mild deficiencies are more common, especially with elderly people and individuals with anorexia nervosa.
 
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