Vitamin A.
If taking large amounts of carotene, your skin will turn a slight orange. It has also been known to kill people.
No, but carotene can.
Beta Carotene can appear yellow, orange, or brown depending on its concentration. A dilute mixture of beta carotene will appear yellow as there isn't enough of it to absorb the extra light needed to make it appear orange.
Excessive consumption of beta-carotene, a precursor to vitamin A, can cause the skin to turn yellow or orange. This condition is known as carotenemia. It is not harmful, but it can be alarming to some individuals.
If taking large amounts of carotene, your skin will turn a slight orange. It has also been known to kill people.
When someone consumes too much beta-carotene, a pigment found in certain foods like carrots, their skin can turn yellow. This condition is called carotenemia and is usually harmless, but it can be mistaken for jaundice.
Carotene is found in root vegetables like carrots, parsnips, ect. Therefore, you get natural carotene from these veggies. It is not an additive to another product. Carotene is also in broccoli, apriots, and kale.
Jaundise can be a serious condition brought on by liver failure. People turn yellow with that condition. Carotine is harmless, and turns people temporarily orange when they ingest large amount of carotene containing vegetables like carrots.
beta carotene in organic
Beta carotene is important for proper eye nutrition.
beta carotene
Not exactly. The body will convert Beta Carotene into Vitamin A when it is needed. That's why Beta Carotene is the preferred and safer version of Vitamin A... you can overdose on pure Vitamin A easier than you can on Beta Carotene