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The Carbohydrates

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Title: The Carbohydrates


1
The Carbohydrates
  • Sugar, Starch,
  • Glycogen, and Fiber

2
Introduction
  • Carbohydrates meet your bodys energy needs
  • Feed your brain and nervous system
  • Keep your digestive system fit
  • Within calorie limits, help keep your body lean
  • Together with fats and protein, digestible
    carbohydrates add bulk to foods
  • Indigestible carbohydrates yield little or no
    energy but provide other benefits

3
A Close Look at Carbohydrates
  • Carbohydrates contain energy that plants captured
    through photosynthesis
  • Photosynthesis makes use of chlorophyll to
    capture energy and sunlight
  • In this process, water donates hydrogen and
    oxygen, and carbon dioxide donates carbon and
    oxygen
  • Water and carbon dioxide combine to form the
    sugar glucose

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A Close Look at Carbohydrates
  • Glucose produced by photosynthesis provides
    energy for the work of all parts of the plant
  • Plants do not use all the energy stored in their
    sugars
  • Some remains available for use by the animal or
    human that consumes the plant
  • Carbohydrates are the first link in the food
    chain that supports all life on Earth

6
A Close Look at Carbohydrates
  • Carbohydrate-rich foods come almost exclusively
    from plants
  • Milk is the only animal-derived food that
    contains significant amounts of carbohydrate

7
Introduction
  • Complex carbohydrates
  • Starch and fiber
  • Simple carbohydrates
  • Sugars

8
A Close Look at Carbohydrates
  • Sugars
  • The three single sugars (monosaccharides) are
    glucose, fructose, and galactose
  • Fructose is the sweet sugar of fruit
  • Galactose is a component of milk sugar
  • Glucose, fructose, and galactose all have the
    same number and kind of atoms arranged in
    different ways

9
A Close Look at Carbohydrates
  • The three double sugars (disaccharides) are
    lactose, maltose, and sucrose
  • Lactose is milk sugar
  • It is made of glucose linked to galactose
  • Maltose has two glucose units
  • It appears wherever starch is being broken down
  • Sucrose is table sugar, which is obtained from
    sugar beets or sugar cane
  • It is made of glucose linked to fructose

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11
A Close Look at Carbohydrates
  • Single sugars are absorbed directly into the
    blood
  • Disaccharides must be split into monosaccharides
    before they can be absorbed

12
A Close Look at Carbohydrates
  • All products of digestion are delivered to the
    liver
  • The liver contains enzymes that modify nutrients,
    making them useful to the body
  • The liver quickly converts fructose or galactose
    to glucose or to smaller pieces that can be used
    to make glucose, fat, or other needed molecules
  • Glucose is the most used monosaccharide in the
    body

13
A Close Look at Carbohydrates
  • Most of the energy of fruits and vegetables comes
    from sugars
  • However, eating them is not the same as eating
    concentrated sweets such as candy or colas

14
A Close Look at Carbohydrates
  • Starch
  • Polysaccharides
  • Starch
  • Glycogen
  • Fiber

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16
A Close Look at Carbohydrates
  • Starch
  • Starch is a plants storage form of glucose
  • For example, corn stores clusters of starch
    molecules in granules and packs the granules into
    its seeds
  • This insoluble starch will nourish the seed until
    the new plant is capable of photosynthesis
  • Soluble glucose would be washed away by rain
  • Starch is nutritive for people because they can
    digest starch to glucose and obtain the suns
    energy stored in its chemical bonds

17
A Close Look at Carbohydrates
  • Glycogen
  • Glycogen is the storage form of glucose in
    animals
  • The glucose chains that make up glycogen are
    longer and more highly branched than those that
    make up starch
  • There is little glycogen in meats because it
    breaks down rapidly when the animal is
    slaughtered

18
A Close Look at Carbohydrates
  • Fiber
  • Some plant fibers provide support to plant
    structures
  • Fibers also retain water to protect seeds from
    drying out
  • Most fibers are polysaccharides

19
A Close Look at Carbohydrates
  • Human digestive enzymes cannot break the bonds
    that hold together the sugar units of starch
  • Thus, most fibers pass through the human body
    without providing energy
  • Bacteria within the human large intestine can
    digest fibers to varying degrees by fermenting
    them
  • The fibers are broken down to waste products
  • Mainly small fatlike fragments that the colon
    absorbs

20
A Close Look at Carbohydrates
  • Soluble fibers dissolve in water
  • Form gels (are viscous)
  • Easily digested by bacteria in the human colon
  • Found in barley, legumes, fruits, oats,
    vegetables
  • Are associated with a lower risk of chronic
    disease
  • Add a pleasing consistency to foods
  • Thickening them

21
A Close Look at Carbohydrates
0
  • Insoluble fibers do not dissolve in water
  • Are less easily fermented
  • The outer layers of whole grains, the strings of
    celery, etc. contain insoluble fibers such as
    cellulose and hemicellulose
  • These fibers retain their structure and texture
    even after hours of cooking
  • They aid the digestive system and ease
    elimination

22
The Need for Carbohydrates
  • The DRI committee recommends that 45 - 65 of
    daily calories come from carbohydrates
  • Fats are not normally used as fuel by the brain
    and central nervous system
  • Glucose is the primary energy source for nerve
    cells

23
The Need for Carbohydrates
  • Sugar
  • Complex sugar molecules coat almost every cell of
    the body
  • Sugar molecules dangle from many of the bodys
    fat and protein molecules
  • Sugars can alter protein shape and function
    affect cell communication and may play roles in
    disease processes

24
The Need for Carbohydrates
  • Recommendations are for complex carbohydrates not
    refined sugars
  • Complex carbohydrates contribute needed nutrients
  • Pure sugars displace nutrient-dense foods from
    the diet
  • Contain no other nutrients and thus are
    empty-calorie foods

25
The Need for Carbohydrates
  • Overuse of sugars may, in many obese people,
    alter blood lipids in ways that increase
    cardiovascular risks
  • Such people should lose weight on a
    calorie-controlled diet
  • High in whole grains, fruits, and vegetables

26
The Need for Carbohydrates
  • Most people should increase their intake of
    fiber-rich, whole foods
  • Such as whole grains, fruits, and vegetables
  • Refined white flour, sugars, and fats associated
    with heart disease should be used in moderation

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28
The Need for Carbohydrates
  • Why Do Nutrition Experts Recommend Fiber-Rich
    Foods?
  • Fiber-rich foods supply vitamins, minerals, and
    phytochemicals
  • These foods also contain little or no fat
  • Viscous fibers such as those found in apples have
    a significant cholesterol-lowering effect
  • Insoluble (nonviscous) fiber such as that found
    in wheat bran is a stool-softener

29
The Need for Carbohydrates
  • Benefits of fiber include
  • Promotion of normal blood cholesterol
    concentrations
  • Modulation of blood glucose concentrations
  • Maintenance of healthy bowel functions
  • Help in the maintenance of a healthy body weight

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32
The Need for Carbohydrates
  • Foods rich in viscous fibers lower blood
    cholesterol by binding with cholesterol-containing
    bile and carrying it out with the feces
  • Bile is needed for digestion, so the liver
    responds to its loss by drawing on the bodys
    cholesterol to make more

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35
The Need for Carbohydrates
  • Foods rich in viscous fibers lower blood
    cholesterol by binding with cholesterol-containing
    bile and carrying it out with the feces
  • During bacterial fermentation of fiber, a small
    fatty acid is produced, absorbed, and travels to
    the liver where it may help reduce cholesterol
    synthesis

36
The Need for Carbohydrates
  • Blood Glucose Control
  • Viscous fibers trap nutrients and delay their
    transit through the digestive tract
  • As a result glucose absorption slows and this
    helps maintain steady levels of blood glucose and
    insulin
  • Large fluctuations in blood glucose and insulin
    are thought to be associated with the onset of
    the most common form of diabetes

37
The Need for Carbohydrates
  • In people with diabetes, high-fiber foods play a
    role in modulating blood glucose and insulin
    levels
  • Lowering the likelihood of medical complications

38
The Need for Carbohydrates
  • Maintenance of Digestive Tract Health
  • Fiber, along with fluid intake, play a role in
    maintaining proper colon function
  • Fibers such as cellulose enlarge and soften
    stools
  • Speeding their passage through the intestine and
    making for easier elimination
  • These fibers help alleviate or prevent
    constipation

39
The Need for Carbohydrates
  • Fiber prevents compaction of intestinal contents
  • Such compaction could obstruct the appendix and
    permit bacteria to invade and infect it
    (appendicitis)
  • Fiber stimulates the GI tract muscles so they
    retain their strength and resist bulging out into
    pouches (diverticula)
  • Diverticulitis is the inflammation of diverticula

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41
The Need for Carbohydrates
  • Recommendations and Intakes
  • DRI recommendations for fiber
  • Men, age 19-50 38 g/day
  • Men, age 51 30 g/day
  • Women age 19-50 25 g/day
  • Women age 51 21 g/day
  • The ADA recommends 20 to 35 grams of total fiber
    per day
  • This is about 2x higher than the average intake

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43
The Need for Carbohydrates
  • Recommendations and Intakes
  • A good way to add fiber while lowering fat is to
    substitute plant sources of proteins for animal
    sources of protein
  • Also, focus on eating 5-9 servings of fruits and
    vegetables each day
  • Eat a variety of high-fiber foods and drink ample
    fluids

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47
Consumer Corner Refined, Enriched, and
Whole-Grain Breads
  • When wheat was ground between two stones, the
    shaft (husk) was removed and the nutrient-rich
    brand, germ, endosperm were retained

48
Consumer Corner Refined, Enriched, and
Whole-Grain Breads
  • Modern milling machinery removes the germ and
    bran
  • Leaving a whiter, smoother-textured flour
  • That has an increased starch content and lower
    fiber content

49
Consumer Corner Refined, Enriched, and
Whole-Grain Breads
  • Turning to white bread has meant a loss of
    nutrients
  • Nutrients formerly received from whole-grain
    bread
  • When this problem was recognized, Congress passed
    the Enrichment Act requiring the addition of
    iron, niacin, thiamin, riboflavin, and folate to
    refined grains

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51
Consumer Corner Refined, Enriched, and
Whole-Grain Breads
  • The enrichment of grain products eliminated known
    deficiency problems
  • However, other deficiencies went undetected for
    many years
  • Enriched products still contain less magnesium,
    zinc, vitamin B6, vitamin E, chromium and fiber
    than whole-grain products

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54
From Carbohydrates to Glucose
  • Starch found in refined grains is rapidly broken
    down to glucose which is then absorbed
  • Starch, such as that of cooked beans, digests
    more slowly and releases glucose later in the
    digestive process

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56
From Carbohydrates to Glucose
  • Why Do Some People Have Trouble Digesting Milk?
  • As they age, 75 - 95 of people lose much of
    their ability to produce lactase
  • This results in lactose intolerance, symptoms of
    which include
  • Nausea, pain, diarrhea, excessive gas
  • Intestinal bacteria ferment the undigested
    lactose resulting in the production of gas and
    intestinal irritants

57
From Carbohydrates to Glucose
  • The inability to digest lactose affects people to
    differing degrees
  • Many can tolerate 1 - 2 cups of milk a day
  • Some can tolerate lactose-reduced milk
  • Rarely lactose cannot be tolerated at all
  • People often overestimate the severity of their
    lactose intolerance
  • A mistake that could adversely affect the health
    of their bones

58
From Carbohydrates to Glucose
  • Infants produce abundant lactase helping them
    absorb the sugar of breast milk and milk-based
    formulas
  • A few suffer inborn lactose intolerance and must
    be fed lactose-free formulas
  • Due to their need for calcium, a milk substitute
    must be found for any child who becomes lactose
    intolerant

59
From Carbohydrates to Glucose
  • Disadvantaged children of the developing world
    sustain the most severe consequence of lactose
    intolerance when it combines with
  • Disease
  • Malnutrition
  • Parasites

60
Splitting Glucose for Energy
  • Below a Healthy Minimum
  • Body fat cannot be converted into glucose to
    adequately feed the brain
  • With a severe carbohydrate deficit the body must
    use protein to make glucose
  • Diverting protein from critical functions of its
    own
  • Therefore, carbohydrates prevent the use of
    protein for energy
  • This is the protein-sparing action of
    carbohydrate

61
Splitting Glucose for Energy
  • Fat fragments usually combine with a compound
    derived from glucose (or protein) before being
    used for energy
  • Without this compound, fat fragments combine with
    each other producing acidic ketone bodies
  • The accumulation of ketone bodies in the blood
    (ketosis) can disturb normal acid-base balance

62
Splitting Glucose for Energy
  • Ketosis during pregnancy can cause brain damage
    to the fetus
  • Resulting in irreversible mental retardation
    after birth
  • Adults with chronic ketosis may face
  • Vitamin and mineral deficiencies, loss of bone
    minerals, altered blood lipids, increased kidney
    stone risk, impaired mood and sense of
    well-being, and glycogen stores that are too low
    to meet a metabolic emergency or support maximal
    high-intensity muscular work

63
Splitting Glucose for Energy
  • The minimum DRI to feed the brain and reduce
    ketosis is 130 grams a day for an average person
  • 3x or 4x this minimum is recommended (45 - 65
    of total energy) to maintain health and glycogen
    stores

64
Storing Glucose as Glycogen
  • As blood glucose rises, the pancreas releases
    insulin
  • Insulin signals the bodys tissues to take up
    glucose
  • Two thirds of the bodys total glycogen is stored
    in and used by muscle
  • A small emergency store is found in the brain
  • The remainder is stored in the liver, which makes
    it available to the body as blood glucose

65
Storing Glucose as Glycogen
  • When blood glucose concentration drops and cells
    need energy, the pancreas produces glucagon
  • Enzymes in the liver break down glycogen
    releasing it into the blood as glucose

66
Returning Glucoseto the Blood
  • Regulation of Blood Glucose
  • Two safeguards are involved in this
  • Replenishment from liver glycogen stores
  • Removal of glucose from the blood with the liver
    converting the excess into glycogen or fat and
    muscle converting it into glycogen

67
Returning Glucoseto the Blood
  • When blood glucose starts to fall too low
  • Glucagon triggers the breakdown of liver glycogen
    to glucose
  • Hormones that promote the conversion of protein
    into glucose are released
  • Only a little protein can be spared

68
Returning Glucoseto the Blood
  • Epinephrine also breaks down liver glycogen as
    part of the bodys defense mechanism in times of
    danger
  • To a person living long ago, this internal source
    of quick energy was indispensable to a life
    filled with physical peril
  • This quick-energy response to stress also works
    to our advantage today
  • To meet emergencies, we are advised to eat and
    store carbohydrates at regularly timed meals

69
Returning Glucoseto the Blood
  • Sugary foods and drinks are not the best choices
  • Balanced meals, eaten on a regular schedule, help
    the body maintain its blood glucose
  • Meals containing starch, fiber, some protein, and
    a little fat slow digestion
  • So that blood glucose enters the blood gradually
    in an ongoing steady supply

70
Returning Glucoseto the Blood
  • The Glycemic Response
  • The glycemic index (GI) is a measure of the
    ability of a food to elevate blood glucose and
    insulin levels
  • Scores are compared with a standard, usually
    white bread or glucose
  • A foods score depends on several factors
  • For example, ice cream, a high-sugar food, ranks
    lower than baked potatoes, a high-starch food

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Returning Glucoseto the Blood
  • Glycemic load
  • Glycemic index multiplied by grams carbohydrate

73
Returning Glucoseto the Blood
  • The glycemic index, along with glycemic load, may
    be important to people with diabetes who must
    regulate their blood glucose
  • The idea being that the lower the glycemic load,
    the less glucose builds up in the blood, and the
    less insulin is needed to maintain normal blood
    glucose concentration

74
Returning Glucoseto the Blood
  • Evidence suggests that a low glycemic load may
    help control body weight
  • The carbohydrates of such foods release a steady
    flow of glucose into the blood and extend
    feelings of fullness
  • High glycemic load foods seem to promote
    overeating in some overweight people
  • And may lead to an increase in the presence of a
    marker of cardiovascular disease risk

75
Returning Glucoseto the Blood
  • The glycemic load may be a better tool for diet
    planning than the glycemic index
  • The glycemic load of carrots is much lower than
    its glycemic index

76
Returning Glucoseto the Blood
  • Many factors can affect glycemic index test
    results
  • Time of day, body size and weight, blood volume,
    metabolic rate
  • A foods glycemic effect may vary from person to
    person
  • And depend on how the food is prepared, its
    ripeness, and which other foods accompany it in a
    meal

77
Diabetes and Hypoglycemia
  • Diabetes mellitus
  • A disease characterized by high blood glucose
    levels and inadequate or ineffective insulin

78
What Is Diabetes?
  • Worldwide, the prevalence of diabetes in on the
    rise
  • In the United States diabetes is the leading
    cause of blindness

79
What Is Diabetes?
  • Additional complications include
  • Amputations
  • Complications in pregnancy
  • Heart disease
  • Kidney disease
  • Premature death
  • Increased risk of death from flu or pneumonia

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82
What Is Diabetes?
  • Half of those with diabetes are unaware of their
    condition
  • And therefore fail to take action to prevent its
    damage
  • Early stages often present few or no warning
    signs
  • Recommendations call for everyone over 45 years
    old (40 in Canada) and younger people with risk
    factors, such as obesity, to be tested regularly

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What Is Diabetes?
  • Type 1 and Type 2 are the most common forms of
    diabetes
  • Both are disorders of blood glucose regulation

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86
What Is Diabetes?
  • Type 1 Diabetes
  • Little or no pancreatic secretion of insulin
  • Often diagnosed in childhood
  • Less common (up to 20 of cases)
  • But is on the rise
  • Most common chronic disease among children and
    young adults

87
What Is Diabetes?
  • Type 1 diabetes is the result of a persons
    immune system attacking the insulin-making cells
    of the pancreas
  • An immune system attack on the pancreas may be
    provoked by
  • Genetics, viral infection and other diseases,
    toxins, allergens, disordered immune system

88
What Is Diabetes?
  • Treatment
  • Receipt of an external source of insulin
  • Meal planning to balance blood insulin and
    glucose concentrations
  • Future treatment
  • Insulin nasal spray and inhaler
  • Transplant insulin-producing cells
  • Vaccine to prevent occurrence of the disease

89
What Is Diabetes?
  • Insulin is a protein
  • If taken orally it will be digested
  • Must be given as injection
  • Daily shots or an insulin pump

90
What Is Diabetes?
  • Type 2 Diabetes
  • Pancreas makes sufficient insulin
  • Bodys cells resist insulins action
  • Often diagnosed in adulthood
  • Incidence has increased by over 60 since 1991

91
What Is Diabetes?
  • Characterized by insulin resistance
  • A condition in which insulin is less then
    effective in moving glucose from the bloodstream
    into the cells
  • As blood glucose rises, so does blood insulin
  • Eventually, the pancreas may become less able to
    make insulin
  • With age, people may require insulin to
    supplement their own supply

92
What Is Diabetes?
  • If drugs are necessary
  • A drug that stimulates the pancreas to secrete
    sufficient insulin to overwhelm the cells
    resistance
  • Or a drug that improves tissue uptake of glucose

93
What Is Diabetes?
  • Type 2 Diabetes and the Genes
  • There is a genetic component to Type 2 diabetes
    susceptibility
  • Not everyone with these genetic variations gets
    the disease
  • Genetic factors may increase a persons risk by
    30
  • Diet and exercise play a major role

94
What Is Diabetes?
  • In the majority of cases, prevention is likely to
    occur when individuals control their lifestyle
  • Middle-aged men and women can reduce their risk
    if they
  • Maintain a healthy body weight
  • Consume a diet high in vegetables, fruit, fish,
    poultry, and whole grains
  • Exercise regularly
  • Restrict alcohol
  • Dont smoke

95
What Is Diabetes?
  • Type 2 Diabetes and Obesity
  • Type 2 diabetes tends to occur late in life
  • Now, overweight children and adolescents are
    being diagnosed with the condition

96
What Is Diabetes?
  • Compared with normal-weight people with diabetes,
    obese people require much more insulin to
    maintain normal blood glucose
  • The more body fat, the more insulin resistant,
    the higher the blood glucose
  • Even moderately overweight people exhibit
    slightly elevated blood glucose (impaired glucose
    tolerance)

97
What Is Diabetes?
  • Impaired glucose tolerance
  • Blood glucose levels higher than normal
  • Not high enough to be diagnosed as diabetes

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