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Vitamins In Blueberries, Nature’s Own Multivitamin

Vitamins in blueberries include K, C, E, B, and A.

If you are wondering whether blueberries are good for you, the answer is a resounding yes! From helping lower your blood pressure to aiding cognitive ability, easing aging-related depression, and even slowing the graying of your hair, there’s plenty this potent functional food can do!1 2 3 But if you’re more curious about what vitamins the berries contain and how far they’ll see you through to your daily nutrient targets, we break it down for you.

The good news is these little dark blue spheres of sweet tartness are loaded with the entire alphabet of vitamins, from A through K, including most of the B vitamins. Here’s a closer look at some of the major vitamins you can expect to find in a serving of blueberries.

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Vitamin K: 23.8% DV

A cup of blueberries contains 28.6 mcg of vitamin K.4 The daily value (DV) requirement of vitamin K is pegged at 120 mcg, so this serving of blueberries meets an impressive 23.8% of the DV.5

Why you need the vitamin: Vitamin K is also known as the blood clotting vitamin, because of its role in helping your blood clot when you have a cut, accident, or undergo a surgery. It also plays a role in bone health, especially in the elderly. 6

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Vitamin C: 16% DV

If it is vitamin C you are after, your serving of a cup of blueberries should get you to about 16% DV of the antioxidant vitamin.7 This serving size has 14.4 mg of vitamin C against the 90 mg of daily value earmarked for the vitamin.8

Why you need the vitamin: Vitamin C is required to keep your skin, bones, teeth, blood vessels, ligaments, and cartilage healthy. The vitamin helps wound healing and scar tissue formation. It is also believed to help overall immune health and may protect against arthritis, heart disease, and cancer.9

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Vitamin E: 5.6% DV

A cup serving of blueberries has around 0.84 mg of vitamin E.10 This will get you about 5.6% DV of this fat-soluble vitamin, against a daily value pegged at 15 mg.11

Why you need the vitamin: This vitamin is needed for muscle and nerve function as well as for good vision, heart health, and immune function. Not getting enough can cause your hair to gray and your skin to wrinkle. You may also show other signs of aging prematurely. Vitamin E’s ability to fight oxidative stress, which is one factor responsible for aging, may have a role to play here.12

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B Vitamins: 2.3–4.7% DV

A cup of blueberries has around 4 to 5% of most B vitamins and around 2.3% of the daily value of folate. Here’s how the numbers stack up:13

Why you need the vitamins: Your body needs the arsenal of B vitamins to tap energy from the food you eat. They are also needed for the formation of red blood cells, making these vitamins vital to your good health.

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In addition to catering to your energy needs, here’s what each of these vitamins is required for:

Inadequate amounts of these vitamins can cause problems ranging from anemia (riboflavin deficiency), ulcers (folate deficiency), and diarrhea (folate deficiency) to peripheral neuropathy (vitamin B6 deficiency), and depression (vitamin B6 deficiency). Pellagra (niacin deficiency), with its digestive issues, skin inflammation, mental impairment, is also a possibility. So is beriberi due to thiamin deficiency, which causes, among other things, mental confusion, difficulty walking, loss of sensation in extremities, and shortness of breath. Inadequate folate can even cause birth defects in babies.19

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Vitamin A: 1.6% DV

The vitamin A content in a cup of blueberries is 80 IU or 4 mcg RAE and covers 1.6% of the daily value. It is derived from beta-carotene.

Why you need the vitamin: Beta-carotene has antioxidant properties and is anti-inflammatory.20 This nutrient can help fight free radical damage and could even have the potential to protect against cancer.21

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In addition to all the vitamins blueberries contain, they also have minerals like:22

 

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How To Use Blueberries

You can use blueberries quite simply as a fruit or berry and eat it plain. But there’s also so much more you can do with it. Here are some ideas to get you started!

Now that you have some food for thought, why not head down to the market and stock up on those blueberries?

References[+]

References
1 Eat blueberries and strawberries three times per week. Harvard Health Publications.
2 Krikorian, Robert, Marcelle D. Shidler, Tiffany A. Nash, Wilhelmina Kalt, Melinda R. Vinqvist-Tymchuk, Barbara Shukitt-Hale, and James A. Joseph. “Blueberry supplementation improves memory in older adults†.” Journal of agricultural and food chemistry 58, no. 7 (2010): 3996-4000.
3 Lobo, Vijaya, Avinash Patil, A. Phatak, and Naresh Chandra. “Free radicals, antioxidants and functional foods: Impact on human health.” Pharmacognosy reviews 4, no. 8 (2010): 118.
4, 8, 10, 13, 22 Blueberries, raw. United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service.
5, 7, 11 Labeling Daily Values. National Institutes of Health.
6 Vitamin K. U.S. National Library of Medicine.
9 Vitamin C. U.S. National Library of Medicine.
12 Vitamin E. Office of Dietary Supplements.
14 Thiamin. U.S. National Library of Medicine.
15 Riboflavin. U.S. National Library of Medicine.
16 Niacin. U.S. National Library of Medicine.
17 Vitamin B6. U.S. National Library of Medicine.
18 Folic acid in diet. U.S. National Library of Medicine.
19 B vitamins. U.S. National Library of Medicine.
20 Vitamin A. The George Mateljan Foundation.
21 Beta carotene. National Center for Biotechnology Information.
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