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Foundations of Health Introduction to Nutrition

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Title: Foundations of Health Introduction to Nutrition


1
Foundations of Health Introduction to Nutrition
  • Dr Frank Thies
  • Department of Medicine Therapeutics
  • December 2006

2
Lecture Aims
  • To define the Science of Nutrition
  • To describe in broad terms the different
    components of Nutritional Science
  • To emphasise the importance and relevance of
    nutrition in health and disease.

3
What is Nutrition?
  • O.E.D definition the action or process of
    supplying or receiving nourishment and that
    which nourishes food, nutriment
  • To nutritional scientists it means the
    processes by which dietary constituents are
    converted into and sustain the body, and how
    these processes determine its development and
    composition, modulate and control its function
    and enable it to resist disease. Studies of the
    effects of each of these characteristics form the
    discipline of nutrition.

4
To Continue
  • Nutrition (with genetic constitution) determines
    the quality and quantity of the soil of the
    body in which the seeds of disease germinate the
    interaction between the nutritional soil and the
    seed will determine the course and cost of
    illness and is the reason that nutrition seems
    to form part, but only a part of many
    specialities.
  • As a modifier of the quality and quantity of the
    body, nutrition emphasises positive health rather
    than simply the absence or treatment of disease

5
In short
  • The food we eat is one of the most intimate
    encounters we have with our environment
  • It is fundamental to our existence
  • Along with our genetic inheritance, the
    composition and quantity of the food we eat
    affects how our bodies function in the short and
    long term.
  • Nutrition Matters!

6
Nutrition is related to many scientific
disciplines
  • Nutrition is a BROAD BASED science!
  • It draws on many many different disciplines
  • Nutritionists specialise depending upon their
    backgrounds and interests.

7
Genes
Malnutrition
Diseases incidence (obesity, diabetes,
CVD, inflammatory diseases, cancer) Prevention Nut
ritional support
Nutrients
Athletic performance
Growth Development Pregnancy Childhood
adolescence Adult aging
Resistance to infection
Cognitive functions
8
Nutrient intake Ene. Vit Prot Lip CHO Trace
elements
Dietary assessment
Malnutrition, diseases
Absorption
Biomarkers
Physiology, Biochemistry, Genetic
Circulation
Food composition
Metabolism
Diseases
Diseases
Excretion
Delivery/storage
Epidemiology used for the study of the relation
between diet diseases. May lead to intervention
studies.
9
Examples of Disciplines Related to Nutrition
  • Physiology and Biochemistry
  • A basic understanding of how the body works at
    both the whole body and cellular level
  • E.g. How food is digested and absorbed
    (physiology) and how the energy present in the
    food is converted into energy for the cells of
    the body (biochemistry)

10
Genetics
  • A great deal of new and exciting research in
    nutrition is oriented towards the effect of
    different dietary components on gene expression
    in relation to many different diseases- e.g.
    obesity, heart disease and cancer. It may be that
    in the future people will be given specific
    dietary advice depending on their genotype! e.g.
    fish oil may be beneficial in the treatment of
    arthritis in some patient but not others.

11
Psychology
  • Behaviour affects what we eat
  • But what we eat may also affect our behaviour!
  • E.g. Influence of supplementary vitamins,
    minerals and essential fatty acids on the
    antisocial behaviour of young adult prisoners.
    Gesch et al in the British Journal of Psychiatry
    (July 2002)

12
Epidemiology
  • This is the study of how often diseases occur in
    different populations and why.
  • Much of our evidence relating diet and disease
    comes from large epidemiological studies of
    different populations.
  • e.g. The European Prospective Investigation into
    Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC)
  • e.g. Studies of Ancel Keys in the 1950s that led
    to the link between saturated fat and coronary
    heart disease.

13
Cross Cultural Epidemiological Studies of CHD
  • Ancel Keys - studies starting in the 1950s
    highlighted the differences in the prevalence of
    CHD across the globe. CHD was unusual in Japan,
    Crete and Corfu while it was a scourge in
    Finland, the USA and the Netherlands for example
  • He demonstrated a link between blood cholesterol
    levels and CHD and dietary saturated fat

14
Diet CHD
  • Research into the relationship between diet and
    CHD is ongoing and complex.
  • Many dietary factors have since been linked
  • But first line public health advice is still to
    reduce the saturated fat content of the diet in
    order to reduce risk of CHD.

15
Nutrition Related Problems
  • Deficiency Diseases
  • Some of these still exist in Europe today
    despite understanding of prevention. For example
    iron deficiency anaemia is surprisingly prevalent
    in Europe (10 of women and girls). Sub-clinical
    iron deficiency may affect around 1/3 of children
    adults and the elderly

16
The Emergence of Adult Chronic Diseases
  • Post War Agriculture Policy geared to provide
    high quality food to guarantee the absence of
    deficiencies so that children would grow well and
    nobody would go hungry. But as deficiencies were
    eradicated new disease patterns emerged with
    chronic adult diseases becoming epidemic

17
Chronic Diseases
  • According to the recent WHO/FAO Expert
    Consultation on Diet, Nutrition the Prevention
    of Chronic Diseases, (WHO, 2003), the growing
    epidemic of chronic diseases affecting both
    developed and developing countries is linked to
    diet and lifestyle changes.

18
Chronic Diseases Considered in the WHO report
  • Obesity
  • Diabetes
  • Cardiovascular Diseases
  • Cancer
  • Osteoporosis and Bone Fracture
  • Dental Disease

19
Obesity
  • The main determinant of the obesity epidemic is
  • The imbalance between declining energy
    expenditure due to physical inactivity and high
    dietary energy (i.e. excess calories).
  • Action Increase physical activity and reduce
    intake of high fat foods and sugary drinks.

20
Diabetes
  • Escalating rates of type 2 diabetes due to
  • Excess weight gain, overweight and obesity and
    physical inactivity
  • Diabetes leads to increased risk of heart
    disease, kidney disease, stroke and infections
  • Action Maintenance of healthy body weight.

21
Cardiovascular Diseases
  • Major killers worldwide. Due to a great extent
    to
  • Unbalanced diets and physical inactivity
  • Action
  • Reduce the intake of saturated and trans fats,
    take sufficient polyunsaturated fats, enough
    fruits and vegetables, and less salt. Increase
    physical activity.

22
Cancer
  • Tobacco is the number 1 cause of cancer.
  • But dietary factors contribute significantly to
    certain types of cancer
  • Maintenance of a healthy weight will reduce the
    risk for cancers of the oesophagus, coloretum,
    breast, endometrium and kidney.
  • Limiting alcohol intake will reduce risk fro
    cancers of the mouth, throat, oesophagus, liver
    and breast.
  • Adequate intakes of fruit and vegetables will
    further reduce risk for oral cavity, oesophagus,
    stomach and colorectal cancer

23
Osteoporosis and bone fractures
  • Adequate intakes of calcium (500mg or more) and
    Vitamin D intakes helps reduce the risk as does
    exposure to sunlight and physical activity.

24
Dental Disease
  • Caries are preventable by
  • Limiting the frequency and amount of consumption
    of sugars and by appropriate exposure to
    fluoride.

25
Early Mediterranean Diet
  • Associated with low rates of CHD and other
    chronic diseases
  • Typified by high intakes of fruit and vegetables,
    low total fat, modest amounts of olive oil,
    substantial amounts of cereal based foods, small
    amounts of milk, meat fish and eggs and very
    little refined sugar.
  • ? The optimal diet for health

26
So what do we teach in nutrition?
  • Dietary constituents
  • Energy- expressed as either kcal or kJ
  • Nutrients that can be split into
  • macronutrients- protein, fat, carbohydrate (and
    alcohol)
  • micronutrients- vitamins and minerals
  • Other bioactive compounds
  • Other- e.g. colours, flavours, toxins,
    carcinogens etc

27
Nutrient Requirements
  • E.g. the Reference Nutrient intake for Vitamin C
    in the UK is 40mg.
  • How is this derived, what is the evidence for
    this recommendation..

28
How the body process energy and nutrients
  • From Digestion Absorption to Cellular
    Nutrition.
  • Includes links with many different scientific
    disciplines and for many classes we draw on the
    expertise of the scientists at the Rowett
    Research Institute here in Aberdeen.

29
Nutrition Development
  • Pregnancy Lactation
  • Infant Feeding
  • Childhood
  • Adolescence
  • Adulthood
  • Old Age

30
Body Composition
  • How nutrition determines the composition of the
    body
  • E.g. proportion of lean tissue and fat free mass
  • E.g. cell membrane composition and therefore cell
    function is affected by the food we eat

31
Diet and Disease
  • Obesity
  • Heart Disease
  • Cancer
  • Diabetes
  • Constipation
  • Etc.

32
Main Components of Nutrition Teaching at
Undergraduate Level
Nutrition the lifecycle
Dietary Constituents
Nutrient utilisation
Body composition nutritional assessment
Nutrient requirements
Diet and Disease
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