The K Vitamin
The K vitamin is essential for the blood to clot to repair
injuries. Whenever a person has a bleeding wound, it is the
K vitamin that is present in the blood that stops the bleeding
and enables most minor cuts to heal quickly.
There are three different forms of the K vitamin. The first
variant of the K vitamin is vitamin K1, also known as phylloquinone.
This is the form of the K vitamin that is found in types of
plant foods. Vitamin K found in plant foods. The second form
of the K vitamin is the vitamin K2, or menaquinone. This type
of the K vitamin is formed by friendly bacteria in the intestines.
Thirdly, there is vitamin K3 which is also known as menadione
and is actually an artificial form of the K vitamin. All three
of these types of K vitamin end up in the liver where it is
used to create the blood clotting substances.
The best natural sources of the K vitamin are green leafy
vegetables, such as spinach. However, because the friendly
bacteria in the intestine makes one of the forms of the K
vitamin it is extremely rare for a person to have a deficiency
of the K vitamin and so K vitamin supplements are not needed
by the majority of people.
Apart from the main function of helping blood to clot, the
K vitamin, specifically the Vitamin K1, has an important part
to play in the bone building process. This K vitamin is required
to retain the calcium in the bones and redistribute it to
where it is needed.
Although a K vitamin deficiency is relatively rare there
are certain groups of people who may suffer from it. Newborn
babies may not have enough of the K vitamin as they have insufficient
bacteria in their intestines to produce it. The majority of
newborn babies in developed countries are therefore given
a K vitamin injection to tide them over until the natural
process takes over. That is the only time that a K vitamin
supplement will be taken by most people throughout their lives.
However, an extended course of antibiotics may lead to a K
vitamin deficiency due to the fact that the antibiotics kill
the intestinal bacteria as well as the ones that they are
being taken to cure. Again, a K vitamin supplement may be
given if the course of antibiotics has to continue for a long
period of time.
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