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Adding vitamin E to foods: implications for the foods and for human health

Taking vitamin E in higher doses than those recommended by the Dietary Reference Intake in foods or supplements helps prevent non-communicable chronic diseases, stimulates the immune system and modulates the degenerative processes associated with aging. On the other hand, the addition of vitamin E to foods to obtain those effects is not common yet because there is no consensus on an ideal dose. Vitamin E has been added to the foods consumed by some populations because their intake used to be below the recommended amount. This study focuses on the role of vitamin E (1) as an antioxidant used by the food industry, (2) as acompound with specific functions in the human body and in foods, (3) as an important nutrient that, when added to foods, is capable of inhibiting lipoperoxidation and increase its intake and (4) as a substance that might be capable of reducing the deleterious effects of the oxidative processes that occur in the human body and therefore helping to prevent non-communicable chronic diseases.

foods; antioxidants; vitamin E


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