The body needs many minerals; these are called essential minerals.
Essential minerals are sometimes divided up into major minerals (macrominerals)
and trace minerals (microminerals). These two groups of minerals are equally
important, but trace minerals are needed in smaller amounts than major
minerals. The amounts needed in the body are not an indication of their
importance.
A balanced diet usually provides all of the essential minerals. The
two tables below list minerals, what they do in the body (their functions), and
their sources in food.
Macrominerals
Major minerals
Mineral
Function
Sources
Sodium
Needed for proper fluid balance, nerve transmission, and
muscle contraction
Table salt, soy sauce; large amounts in processed foods;
small amounts in milk, breads, vegetables, and unprocessed meats
Chloride
Needed for proper fluid balance, stomach acid
Table salt, soy sauce; large amounts in processed foods;
small amounts in milk, meats, breads, and vegetables
Potassium
Needed for proper fluid balance, nerve transmission, and
muscle contraction
Meats, milk, fresh fruits and vegetables, whole grains,
legumes
Calcium
Important for healthy bones and teeth; helps muscles relax
and contract; important in nerve functioning, blood clotting, blood pressure
regulation, immune system health
Milk and milk products; canned fish with bones (salmon,
sardines); fortified tofu and fortified soy milk; greens (broccoli, mustard
greens); legumes
Phosphorus
Important for healthy bones and teeth; found in every cell;
part of the system that maintains acid-base balance
Meat, fish, poultry, eggs, milk, processed foods (including
soda pop)
Magnesium
Found in bones; needed for making protein, muscle
contraction, nerve transmission, immune system health
Nuts and seeds; legumes; leafy, green vegetables; seafood;
chocolate; artichokes; "hard" drinking water
Sulfur
Found in protein molecules
Occurs in foods as part of protein: meats, poultry, fish,
eggs, milk, legumes, nuts
Trace minerals (microminerals)
The body needs trace minerals in very small amounts. Note that
iron is considered to be a trace mineral, although the
amount needed is somewhat more than for other microminerals.
Trace minerals
Mineral
Function
Sources
Iron
Part of a molecule (hemoglobin) found in red blood cells
that carries oxygen in the body; needed for energy metabolism
Organ meats; red meats; fish; poultry; shellfish
(especially clams); egg yolks; legumes; dried fruits; dark, leafy greens;
iron-enriched breads and cereals; and fortified cereals
Zinc
Part of many
enzymes; needed for making
protein and genetic material; has a function in taste
perception, wound healing, normal fetal development, production of sperm,
normal growth and sexual maturation, immune system health
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