| |
Surviving Pregnancy By Taking Right Prenatal Vitamins By Sam Cyrus
Prenatal vitamins is commonly used not only by expectant mothers but also women who are planning to conceive. For the expectant mothers, taking the prenatal vitamins is so important for their babies as well. Even some mothers choose to continue taking prenatal vitamins throughout their pregnancies and while they are breastfeeding.
It is important to remember that the prenatal vitamins are supplements. It is not good practice to rely on vitamins for all of your nutritional needs. So the expectant mothers must also eat a healthy, well-balanced diet than it is to take pills, no matter how beneficial they are. While taking simultaneously with a healthy diet, the prenatal vitamins will work better because some of the nutrients in the foods help to absorb the vitamins.
Another extremely important supplement of pregnant woman’s diet is calcium. Taking the calcium for the expectant mothers is caused by the prenatal vitamins do not have the recommended daily allowance of calcium. Prenatal vitamins have about 250 milligrams of calcium but an expectant mother requires between 1,200 and 1,500 milligrams of calcium each day to assure that the baby will develop properly. This is a significant difference.
Not every prenatal vitamin is the same; in fact some may not benefit the expectant mother as much as they claim. Recent studies show that a pregnant woman’s body does not necessarily absorb all of the nutrients provided by the vitamins, especially folate. Folate is extremely important in the baby’s prenatal development. The vitamin helps prevent birth defects like spina-bifida. Only three out of nine vitamins on average actually provide the amount of folate labeled on the bottle. This is not to suggest that the supplements do not have the vitamin, it just is not absorbed by the woman’s body.
Being easily absorbed or not of the prenatal vitamins is another important factor to be considered. There is an easy test you can use to determine if the vitamins will be absorbed into your system. Put one of the prenatal vitamins into a cup of water. Wait ten minutes. If the vitamin is dissolved, or is very soft, it will be absorbed into your system. If the vitamin remains hard, it will probably pass through your system without depositing many of the nutrients it carries.
The benefits of prenatal vitamins are enormous and highly recommended, but good nutrition is still better than any supplement. It is important for a woman to discuss with her medical practitioner which nutrition she should take and which she should avoid.
|
|