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LearnHub • Evidence-Informed • Australian Context

LearnHub Nutrient Finder Nutrient Overview

Learn About Essential Nutrients

Independent education on vitamins, minerals, amino acids, essential fats and more — written by The Vitamin Guy in an Australian healthcare context.

🔎 Purpose: To give you clear, evidence-informed education so you can have better conversations with your GP or healthcare provider.

⚖️ Important: This page is for general education only — it does not diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent illness.

Evidence-Informed • Australian Context • TGA Compliant

Lutein & Zeaxanthin

Educational profile — independent, evidence-informed overview. This content is not medical advice. Please consult your healthcare provider for personalised guidance.

🔑 Core Function

  • 👁️ Macular concentration: Form the yellow pigment in the retina (macula).
  • 🔵 Blue light filter: Help protect photoreceptors from high-energy blue light.
  • 🛡️ Antioxidant defence: Neutralise free radicals to support long-term retinal health.

🧬 Family & Essentiality

ClassXanthophyll carotenoids (non-provitamin A)
EssentialityNot essential; beneficial dietary pigments
Main formsLutein & Zeaxanthin

🌿 Plain-Language Summary

Lutein and zeaxanthin are yellow plant pigments found in leafy greens 🥬, corn 🌽, and egg yolks 🥚. They build up in the macula — the central part of the retina — acting like “natural sunglasses” 🕶️ by filtering blue light and supporting visual function.

⚗️ Molecular & Chemical IDs

  • 🧪 Lutein CAS: 127-40-2
  • 🧪 Zeaxanthin CAS: 144-68-3
  • 🔄 Properties: Fat-soluble; circulate with lipoproteins

⚡ Absorption & Bioavailability

✅ Enhanced by

  • Dietary fat (e.g., oils, avocado 🥑, nuts)
  • Egg yolk matrix 🥚
  • Light cooking or pureeing greens

❌ Reduced by

  • Very low-fat diets
  • Fat-malabsorption conditions

🇦🇺 Australian NRVs

📊 No RDI/AI is set for lutein or zeaxanthin. Dietary intake is encouraged via carotenoid-rich foods such as leafy greens, corn, and egg yolks.

🍳 Food Sources

  • 🥬 Leafy greens: spinach, kale, silverbeet
  • 🌽 Corn
  • 🥚 Egg yolks

💡 Tip: Eat greens with avocado or olive oil to boost absorption.

🧪 Testing & Monitoring

  • 🔬 Research use: Macular pigment optical density (measured in eye clinics).
  • Serum carotenoid levels (mainly in research).
  • ❌ Not a routine pathology test in Australia.

🔗 Interactions

  • ⚖️ Compete with other carotenoids (β-carotene, lycopene) for absorption.
  • 🥗 Overall dietary pattern influences uptake balance.

📊 Evidence Snapshot

  • 🔬✅ Established: Accumulate in the macula; filter blue light; act as antioxidants.
  • 🧪⚖️ Mixed evidence: Supplementation shows variable benefits — strongest where baseline diet is low (e.g., AREDS2 trial).

📚 References & Further Reading

  1. NIH Office of Dietary Supplements. (2022). Carotenoids Fact Sheet. Retrieved from https://ods.od.nih.gov
  2. Food Standards Australia New Zealand (FSANZ). (2021). Australian Food Composition Database. Retrieved from https://www.foodstandards.gov.au
  3. Ma, L., et al. (2009). The role of lutein and zeaxanthin in eye disease. Molecular Nutrition & Food Research, 53(1), 68–82. https://doi.org/10.1002/mnfr.200800279
  4. Age-Related Eye Disease Study 2 (AREDS2) Research Group. (2013). Lutein + Zeaxanthin supplementation in AMD. JAMA, 309(19), 2005–2015. https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2013.4997

TGA-compliant note: This page describes normal physiological roles and supporting nutrients. It does not claim to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent disease.

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