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Root Vegetables—Composition, Health Effects, and Contaminants

International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 2022 52 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Eliza Knez, Kornelia Kadac-Czapska, Kamila Dmochowska‐Ślęzak, Małgorzata Grembecka

Summary

This review summarizes the nutritional benefits, health effects, and contamination risks associated with common root vegetables like carrots, beets, and radishes. While these vegetables offer valuable bioactive compounds with antioxidant and health-promoting properties, researchers note they are susceptible to soil contaminants including heavy metals, pesticides, and microplastics. The study suggests that current contamination levels in root vegetables are generally too low to pose health risks to average consumers.

Root vegetables are known all over the world, but they are being less and less consumed by individuals. The main purpose of this article was to summarize the benefits, health effects, and threats associated with the consumption of carrot, celery, parsley, beetroot, radish, turnip, and horseradish. They are characterized by high nutritional value due to their richness in dietary fiber, vitamins, and minerals. One of their most important features is their high content of bioactive compounds, such as polyphenols, phenols, flavonoids, and vitamin C. These compounds are responsible for antioxidant potential. Comparison of their antioxidant effects is difficult due to the lack of standardization among methods used for their assessment. Therefore, there is a need for a reference method that would allow for correct interpretation. Moreover, root vegetables are characterized by several health-promoting effects, including the regulation of metabolic parameters (glucose level, lipid profile, and blood pressure), antioxidant potential, prebiotic function, and anti-cancer properties. However, due to the type of cultivation, root vegetables are vulnerable to contaminants from the soil, such as toxic metals (lead and cadmium), pesticides, pharmaceutical residues, microplastics, and nitrates. Regardless, the low levels of toxic substances present in root vegetables do not pose health risks to the average consumer.

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