- Choline facts Linus Pauling Institute
- Choline as a conditionally essential nutrient PubMed
- Choline: an essential nutrient for public health PubMed Central
- Conditionally essential amino acids MedlinePlus
- Lutein and zeaxanthin as conditionally essential nutrients ScienceDirect
- The clinical significance of betaine PubMed
- Review: Taurine: A “very essential” amino acid PubMed Central
- Taurine PubChem
Essential Nutrients
What are essential nutrients?
Essential nutrients are those nutrients that are vital for your health, but they cannot be produced in your body, so you have to get them from foods or dietary supplements in order to be healthy.
Five, Not Six Groups of Essential Nutrients
Five groups of essential nutrients include 1. water, 2. all vitamins, 3. some minerals, 4. some amino acids (from proteins) and 5. some fatty acids (from fats).
Carbohydrates, frequently listed as an essential group of nutrients, are NOT essential. Your body can synthesize all carbohydrates it needs, including glucose, from proteins and fats. Essential nutrients along with carbohydrates are often named basic or key nutrients, though. Several research groups currently recommend getting 55-65% of calories from carbohydrates. This means, even if carbohydrates are not essential, they may be a healthy nutrient choice.
A Nearly Complete List of Essential Nutrients
The number of nutrients that are considered essential is not fixed; every now and then some nutrient gets on or off of the list. We here present 39 nutrients for which we believe are currently considered essential:
Chart 1. Essential Nutrients |
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Water |
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Vitamins |
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Minerals | |
Amino acids | |
Fatty acids |
Conditionally Essential Nutrients
Conditionally essential nutrients can be produced in your body, but in certain circumstances, like a severe disease or infancy, you may need to obtain additional amounts from foods. The following nutrients are considered conditionally essential by some, but not all, researchers:
- Vitamin D (vitamin D2 or ergocalciferol, and vitamin D3 or cholecalciferol)
- Amino acids: arginine, cysteine, glutamine, glycine, ornithine, proline, serine , taurine [7,8] and tyrosine [4]
- Lutein and zeaxanthin [5]
- Betaine [6]
More Research Needed
It is currently not clear if the following nutrients are also essential for humans: aluminum, boron, lead, nickel, silicon, sulfur, vanadium.
Non-Essential Nutrients
All other nutrients that can be synthesized by the human body in sufficient amounts are called non-essential nutrients, for example, starch, fructose, saturated fatty acids and cholesterol.
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