Vitamin K Content in Food
According to the Linus Pauling Institute at Oregon State University, vitamin K is a fat-soluble nutrient that helps blood to clot and is thought to have a role in cell and bone growth. Vitamin K is common in fresh food, so deficiencies are rare. Deficiencies occur in people who have diseases of the colon or who have been on a long course of antibiotics, which can block vitamin K absorption.
A single serving of green leafy vegetables such as spinach contains much more vitamin K than an adult needs in a day. According to NutritionData.com (see Resources below), 1 cup of spinach, what you might find in a small spinach salad, has almost twice the amount of vitamin K a healthy adult needs, based on federal daily value guidelines. The following vegetables and fruit have large amounts of vitamin K.
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Greens
Cruciferous vegetables
Deeply colored lettuce
Parsely and its relatives
Fruit
Warning
Resources
- Photo Credit Oregon State University Extension, Wikimedia Commons, DuPont