Abstract

Vegetables are considered essential for well-balanced diets since they supply vitamins, minerals, dietary fiber, and phytochemicals. Each vegetable group contains an unique combination and amount of these phytonutriceuticals, which distinguishes them from other groups and vegetables whithin their own group. In the daily diet vegetables have been strongly associated with improvement of gastrointestinal health, good vision, and reduced risk of heart disease, stroke, chronic diseases such as diabetes, and some forms of cancer. Some phytochemicals of vegetables are strong antioxidants and are thought to reduce the risk of chronic disease by protecting against free radical damage, by modifying metabolic activation and detoxification of carcinogens, or even by influencing processes that alter the course of tumor cells. All the vegetables may offer protection to humans against chronic diseases. Nutrition is both a quantity and a quality issue, and vegetables in all their many forms ensure an adequate intake of most vitamins and nutrients, dietary fibers, and phytochemicals which can bring a much-needed measure of balance back to diets contributing to solve many of these nutrition problems. The promotion of healthy vegetable products has coincided with a surging consumer interested in the healthy functionality of food. Because each vegetable contains a unique combination of phytonutriceuticals, a great diversity of vegetables should be eaten to ensure that individual’s diet includes a combination of phytonutriceuticals and to get all the health benefits. This article make a review and discusses the nutritional quality and health benefits of the major groups of vegetables. More interdisciplinary work is required that involves nutritional and food scientists as well as others from biomedical fields to ascertain the thrue function of specific phytonutriceuticals.

Highlights

  • Vegetables make up a major portion of the diet of humans in many parts of the world and play a significant role in human nutrition, especially as sources of phytonutriceuticals: vitamins (C, A, B1, B6, B9, E), minerals, dietary fiber and phytochemicals [1,2,3,4]

  • Because each vegetable contains a unique combination of phytonutriceuticals, a great diversity of vegetables should be eaten to ensure that individual’s diet includes a combination of phytonutriceuticals and to get all the health benefits

  • Whith the exception of glucosinolates and thiosulfides, which are unique to the crucifers and alliums, the phytonutriceuticals content of a number of other vegetales consist primarily of vitamin C, fiber, selenium, folate and polyphenolics

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Summary

Introduction

There are a general belief among nutritionists and health profissionals that the health benefit of vegetables should not be linked to only one compound or one type of vegetable, but rather a balanced diet that includes more than one type of vegetable is likely to provide better protection. Mallillin et al [32] determined the total, soluble and insoluble fibre and fermentability characteristics of ten legumes mature seeds (mungbean, soyabean peanut, pole sitao, cowpea, chickpea, green pea, lima bean, kidney bean and pigeon pea) and concluded that the dietary fibre content ranged from 20.9 to 46.9 g/100g and that the best sources after in vitro fermentation using human faecal inoculum stimulating conditions in the human collon (as mmol/g/fibre isolate of acetate, propinate, butyrate produced after fibre fermentation measured by HPLC) were pole sitao and mungbean (acetate), kidney bean and pigeon pea, (propinate), and peanut and cowpea (butyrate). Trinidad et al [33] determined the mineral availability in vitro of iron, zinc and calcium in ten local legumes (cowpeas, mung beans, pole sitao, chickpeas, green peas, groundnuts, pigeon peas, kidney beans, lima beans and soyabeans). We will highlight the health benefits of the most studied and consumed vegetables namely crucifer, allium and solanaceous vegetables

Crucifers
Alliums
Solanaceous Vegetables
Findings
Conclusions
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