Vitamin A in large doses as a supplement has been shown to have a potentially negative effect on fetal development. Carrots and vegetables, on the other hand, do not contain vitamin A itself but carotene. Carotene is provitamin A and is converted to vitamin A in your body only if your body needs it.
You cannot get too much Vitamine A by eating Carotene because the body regulates conversion from carotene to Vitamin A. Although carotene is converted to vitamin A in the body, excessive ingestion of carotene causes carotenemia, not vitamin A toxicity.
Carotenemia is usually asymptomatic but may lead to carotenodermia, in which the skin becomes yellow. When taken as a supplement, β-carotene has been associated with increased cancer risk; risk does not appear to increase when carotenoids are consumed in fruits and vegetables.
Eating carrots and vegetables cannot do any harm to your baby.
probably not. during my pregnancy i was paranoid about eating too many carrots. your body will expel most of those extra nutrients that you don't need out.
No.
No
Many rabbit cartoons show rabbits eating carrots and stealing them from gardens such as Peter Rabbit and Bugs Bunny. What's up Doc?
Eating too many apples will cause a laxative effect.
So many times progesterone preparations are prescribed by your gynaecologist to you during early pregnancy.
If you eat too many carrots, your skin can turn orange and you may pass gas. The chances of humans being harmed by eating carrots as part of a balanced, healthy diet are very, very slim. but they are very rich in Vitamin A, so you would not want to eat only carrots.
There are no reported cases of people dying from eating carrots. Carrots are a healthy food rich in vitamins and nutrients that is safe for consumption.
Too many carrots, but that's the mystery
yes if you eat a lot after a long period of time
yes it can, and it turnes your skin orange.
As with most food, carrots should be eaten as part of a mixed diet. Eating very large amounts of carrots will put carotene in your blood causing carotenemia, or yellowish discoloration of the skin.