Carbohydrates - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 47
About This Presentation
Title:

Carbohydrates

Description:

Nutritive sweeteners. Contain 4 kcal energy per gram ... Alternative Sweeteners. Acceptable Daily Intakes (ADI) ... Alternative Sweeteners. Health Disorders ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:100
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 48
Provided by: joshuaw1
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Carbohydrates


1
Carbohydrates
2
Carbohydrates
  • One of the three macronutrients
  • A primary energy source, especially for neurons
    (nerve cells)
  • CH2O
  • Grains, fruits and vegetables

3
Question
  • Name ONE other macronutrient tell me its energy
    content (kcal/gram)

4
Where do Carbs originate?
  • As glucose in plants!
  • Glucose
  • Most abundant carbohydrate
  • Produced by plants ( other photosynthetic
    organisms) via photosynthesis
  • Simple or complex

5
Data
0
  • This is the general equation for
    photosynthesisthe process of capturing sunlight
    energy and converting it to chemical energy.
    Which of the following are the reactants of this
    reaction?
  • C6H12O6 and O2.
  • CO2 and H2O.

6
Types of Carbohydrates
  • Simple contain 1 or 2 monomers
  • Monosaccharides contain 1
  • Disaccharides contain 2
  • Complex contain 100s to 1000s of monomers
  • Starches, glycogen, fibers

7
Monosaccharides
  • Glucose usually occurs with other sugars
  • Fructose fruit vegetable sugar
  • Galactose Always occurs with glucose in foods

8
Disaccharides
  • Lactose Milk sugar (glucose galactose)
  • Maltose Malt sugar (glucose glucose)
    by-product of digestion fermentation in our
    bodies substrate for fermentation in beer and
    liquor)
  • Sucrose Naturally occurring fruit sugar

9
Complex
  • Starch Storage form of glucose in plants
  • Glycogen Storage form of glucose in animals
  • Muscle and liver
  • Fiber Form structural support elements of plants

10
What happens to Complex Carbohydrates?
  • Starch
  • Digest starch to glucose
  • Convert it to usable energy, OR
  • store it as glycogen

11
Complex Carbohydrates
  • Glycogen
  • Stored in the liver muscles
  • Not a source of dietary carbohydrate

12
Complex Carbohydrates
  • Fiber
  • Dietary fiber is the non-digestible part of
    plants
  • Grains, rice, seeds, legumes, fruits
  • Functional fiber is carbohydrate extracted from
    plants and added to food
  • Cellulose, guar gum, pectin, psyllium
  • Total fiber dietary functional fiber

13
Digestion of Carbs
  • Begins in the mouth
  • Salivary amylase hydrolyzes starch to short
    polysaccharides maltose
  • What kind of macromolecule is amylase?
  • Mechanical digestion with teeth
  • Stops in stomach
  • HCl denatures amylase
  • Resumes in SI
  • Pancreatic amylase also digests carbs to maltose

14
Question
  • Name another digestive organ that directly adds
    secretions to the small intestine.
  • Stomach
  • Gall Bladder
  • Liver
  • a and b
  • b and c

15

Monosaccharide enter capillaries within the
intestinal villi.
In the liver, galactose fructose are converted
to glucose.
Monosaccharides travel to the liver via the
bloodstream.
Fig. 4-11, p. 110
16
Transport Use
  • ALL monosaccharides are converted to glucose by
    the liver
  • Q Name one other monosaccharide.
  • Glucose circulating in the blood is our primary
    energy source
  • Excess glucose is converted to glycogen by the
    liver and skeletal muscles
  • Q Is this an anabolic or catabolic process

17
Storage of Glycogen
18
Digestion of Carbohydrates
  • We do not have the enzymes necessary to digest
    fiber
  • Bacteria in large intestine can break down some
    fiber
  • Produce fatty acids and gas
  • Most fiber remains undigested and is eliminated
    with feces

19
(No Transcript)
20
Question
  • Where does digestion of Carbohydrates NOT occur?
  • Mouth
  • Stomach
  • Small intestine
  • Large intestine

21
Regulation of Blood Glucose
  • Amount of glucose (and therefore, access to quick
    energy) in the blood
  • Pancreatic cells produce, store and secrete two
    hormones, insulin and glucagon, which control
    level of glucose in the blood

22
Regulation of Blood Glucose Insulin
  • After eating, pancreas releases
  • Insulin
  • Stimulates cells of the body to absorb glucose
    from the bloodstream
  • Stimulates the liver to absorb glucose and
    convert it to glycogen

23
Regulation of Blood Glucose Insulin
24
Regulation of Blood Glucose Glucagon
  • Glucagon
  • Stimulates the breakdown (hydrolysis) of glycogen
    to glucose to make quick energy available to
    cells of the body
  • Stimulates gluconeogenesis production of
    glucose from amino acids (AA)
  • Where do these AA come from?

25
Regulation of Blood Glucose Glucagon
26
Food Blood Glucose
  • Glycemic index A foods ability to raise blood
    glucose levels
  • Foods with a low glycemic index
  • Dont produce dramatic fluctuations in blood
    glucose
  • May increase HDL/LDL ratio (good cholesterol)
  • Are generally higher in fiber
  • May reduce the risk of heart disease and colon
    cancer

27
Glycemic indices
28
The Role of Carbohydrates
  • Energy
  • 4 kcal/kg
  • Red blood cells rely only on glucose for energy
    supply
  • Glucose is especially important for energy during
    exercise

29
The Role of Carbohydrates
30
The Role of Carbohydrates
  • Energy
  • When we do not have sufficient energy in the form
    of carbs, we produce ketones as an alternate
    energy source
  • Why not ketones?
  • Excessive ketones increase blood acidity
  • High blood acidity damages body tissues

31
The Role of Carbohydrates
  • Energy
  • Insufficient carbohydrate intake forces the body
    to find an alternate source of glucose
  • Proteins are used for gluconeogenesis the
    production of new glucose

32
Role of Carbohydrates
  • Fiber
  • May reduce the risk of colon cancer
  • May reduce the risk of heart disease
  • May block or delay absorption of dietary
    cholesterol
  • May enhance weight loss
  • Occupies space so you feel full also absorbs
    water and expands
  • Helps prevent GI diseases/disorders
    (hemorrhoids, constipation, diverticulosis)

33
How Much Carbohydrate?
  • Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA) is 130
    grams/day just to supply the brain with glucose
  • 45-65 of daily calorie intake should be in the
    form of carbohydrates

34
Type of carb matters
  • Most Americans eat too many simple sugars
  • Most of these come from added sugars
  • Added sugars sugars and syrups added to food
    during processing
  • Common source is soda pop ( 10 tsp. sugar per 12
    oz. can)
  • Average American consumes 40 gallons each year!

35
Simple vs. Complex Carbs
  • Diets high in simple sugars
  • Contribute to dental problems such as cavities
    and gum disease
  • Cavity causing bacteria thrive on simple sugars
  • Are associated with increased levels of bad
    cholesterol and decreased levels of good
    cholesterol
  • These changes are known to cause heart disease

36
Simple vs. Complex Carbs
  • Complex carbs come associated with fiber
  • Adequate Intake (AI) of fiber 14 grams for
    every 1,000 kcal in the diet
  • Most Americans eat only 1/2 the recommended
    amount of fiber
  • Whole grain foods are a more healthful choice
    than foods with added sugar
  • Come stocked with lots of fiber necessary
    vitamins and minerals

37
(No Transcript)
38
Alternatives to sugar
  • Nutritive sweeteners
  • Contain 4 kcal energy per gram
  • Sucrose, fructose, honey, brown sugar, sugar
    alcohols
  • Non-nutritive (alternative) sweeteners
  • Provide little or no energy

39
Alternative Sweeteners
  • Acceptable Daily Intakes (ADI) have been
    established for
  • aspartame
  • sucralose
  • acesulfame-K
  • No ADI has been set for saccharin but it has been
    removed from the list of cancer-causing agents.

40
Alternative Sweeteners
41
Health Disorders
  • Three health disorders related to carbohydrate
    metabolism
  • Diabetes
  • Hypoglycemia
  • Lactose intolerance

42
Diabetes
  • Diabetes
  • Inability to regulate blood glucose levels
  • Three types
  • Type 1 diabetes
  • Type 2 diabetes
  • Gestational diabetes
  • Untreated diabetes can cause nerve damage, kidney
    damage, blindness, and death

43
Diabetes
  • Type 1 diabetes
  • Accounts for 10 of all cases
  • Patients do not produce enough insulin
  • Causes hyperglycemia high blood sugar (glucose)
  • Requires insulin injections
  • May be an autoimmune disease

44
Diabetes
  • Type 2 diabetes
  • Most diabetics have Type 2 diabetes
  • Body cells are insensitive or unresponsive to
    insulin
  • Excess insulin is often produced
  • Causes hyperglycemia because cells cannot remove
    glucose from the blood

45
Diabetes
  • Type 2 diabetes
  • Causes include genetic predisposition, obesity,
    and physical inactivity
  • Treated with diet, exercise, and possibly oral
    medications
  • Healthy lifestyle choices may prevent or delay
    onset of type 2 diabetes

46
Hypoglycemia
  • Hypoglycemia
  • Low blood sugar (glucose)
  • Reactive hypoglycemia results when too much
    insulin is produced after a meal
  • Causes shakiness, sweating, anxiety
  • Fasting hypoglycemia results when too much
    insulin is produced even when the patient has not
    eaten

47
Lactose Intolerance
  • Lactose intolerance
  • Insufficient lactase production inability to
    digest lactose (milk sugar)
  • Symptoms intestinal gas, bloating, nausea,
    cramping, diarrhea
  • Alternate sources of calcium
  • Tomato juice, seaweed, cabbage, squashes, beets
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com