Title: Chapter 13 Nutrition for a Life time
1Chapter 13Nutrition for a Life time
2Energy Needs During Pregnancy
- 1st trimester
- Balanced and adequate diet
- 2nd and 3rd trimester
- 350-450 extra kcal per day
- 3rd trimester
- Transfer of fat, calcium, and iron to fetus
during the last month - Fetus may deplete mothers store of iron if
intake is low - Choose nutrient dense foods
- Physical Activity
- Increase kcalories if exercising
3Folic Acid
- Strong evidence that folic acid prevents
preconceptionally recurrent and first occurent
neural tube defects - Increasing evidence that folic acid reduces risk
of some other birth defects - Improves the hematologic indices in women
receiving routine iron and folic acid - USPHS/CDC recommends for US women
- 400 ?g/day All women in childbearing age
- 1 mg/day Pregnant women
- 4 mg/day Women with history of neural tube
defect deliveries take folic acid 1 month prior
to conception and during first trimester
Czeizel 1993 Czeizel and Dudas 1992 Mahomed et
al 1998 MRC Vitamin Study Research Group 1991.
4Iron Supplementation
- Iron requirements
- Average non-pregnant adult
- 800 ?g iron lost/day
- 500 ?g iron lost/day during menses
- Pregnant woman Increased need
- Expanded blood volume
- Fetal and placental requirements
- Blood loss during delivery
- Routine vs. selective iron supplementation
- Prevalence of nutritional anemia
- Routine iron and folate supplementation where
nutritional anemia is prevalent - Recommended dose 60 mg elemental iron 5 ?g
folic acid
Mahomed 2000b WHO 1994.
5Iodine Supplementation
- Iodine deficiency is a preventable cause of
mental impairment - Iodine supplementation and fortification programs
have been largely successful in decreasing iodine
deficiency conditions - Population with high levels of mental retardation
(e.g., some parts of China) - Supplementation may be effective at preconception
up to mid-pregnancy period - Form of iodine supplementation (iodinating food
or oral/injectable iodine) depend on - Severity of iodine deficiency
- Cost
- Availability of different preparation
Enkin et al 2000 Mahomed and Gülmezoglu 2000.
6Vitamin A
- Indications for vitamin A supplementation
- Vertical transmission of HIV (ongoing)
- Infant survival
- Maternal anemia Positive interaction with iron
in reducing anemia - Infection
- Maternal mortality
- Vitamin A vs. placebo RR 0.60 (0.370.97)
- Beta-carotene vs. placebo RR 0.51 (0.300.86)
- Potential adverse effects of Vitamin A and
related substances - Total daily dose gt 10,000 IU before 7th week of
gestation associated with birth defects
craniofacial, central nervous system, thymic
cardiac - Overall effectiveness and safety of vitamin A
supplementation needs to be evaluated
Rothman et al 1995 Suharno et al 1993 West et
al 1999.
7Other Micronutrients Calcium
- Association between reduction in pregnancy
induced hypertension (PIH) and calcium
supplementation - Reduction of incidence of PIH
- Routine supplementation likely beneficial in
women at high risk of developing PIH or have low
dietary calcium intake - High calcium doses (2 g/day) not associated with
adverse events - Need adequately sized and designed trials in
different settings to confirm beneficial effects - Recommend increase in calcium intake through diet
in women at risk of hypertension or low calcium
areas
Bucher et al 1996 Kulier et al 1998
Lopez-Jaramillo et al 1997.
8Calcium Supplementation Conclusions
- Calcium decreases risk of hypertension,
pre-eclampsia, low birth weight, and chronic
hypertension in children - Recommend for high risk women with low calcium
intake, if pre-eclampsia is important in the
population - Calcium has other health benefits not related to
pregnancy - Maintaining bone strength
- Proper muscle contraction
- Blood clotting
- Cell membrane function
- Healthy teeth
Atallah, Hofmeyr and Duley 2000.
9Recommended weight grain during pregnancy
- 2 - 4 lb. weight gain during 1st trimester
- 0.75 - 1 lb. weekly weight gain during
- 2nd and 3rd trimester
- Total weight gain goal
- 25 - 35 lb. for normal weight women
- 28 - 40 lb. for low weight (BMI lt 19.8)
- 15 - 25 for high weight (BMI 26-29)
- 15 - 25 lb. for obese (BMI gt 29)
10Components of Weight Gain
11Protein and Carbohydrate need during pregnancy
- RDA for protein
- Additional 25 gm/day
- Many (non-pregnant) women already
- consume recommended amount of protein
- RDA for carbohydrate
- Prevent ketosis
- 175 gm/day
- Most women exceed this amount
12Additional Mineral Need
- Calcium (1000 mg/day)
- Adequate mineralization of fetal skeleton and
teeth - Iron (27 mg/day)
- Increased hemoglobin
- Iron stores for the fetus
- Iron supplement between meals
- Possible effects of iron-deficiency anemia
- Preterm delivery
- Low-birth weight
- Fetal deaths
- Zinc (11 mg/day)
- supports growth and development
13Pregnant vs. Nonpregnanat
Energy/Nutrient Non-pregnant Pregnant
Protein 46 g/day 71 g/day
Vitamin C 75 mg/day 85 mg/day
Thiamin 1.1 mg/day 1.4 mg/day
Niacin 14 mg/day 18 mg/day
Folate 400 mcg/day 600 mg/day
Vitamin D 5 mcg/day 5 mcg/day
Calcium 1000 mg/day 1000 mg/day
Iron 18 mg/day 27 mg/day
Iodine 150 mcg/day 220 mcg/day
14What about Aspartame
- Harmful for mothers with phenylketonuria (PKU)
- Disrupts fetal brain development
- Moderate use not harmful for women who do not
have PKU
What about Caffeine
- Decreases iron absorption
- May reduce blood flow through the placenta
- Caffeine withdrawal symptoms in newborn
- Risk of spontaneous abortion
- Heavy caffeine use in the 1st trimester
- Risk of low-birth-weight infant
- Limit caffeine intake (lt 3 cups coffee/day)
15Pregnancy Complications
- Gestational Diabetes
- Hormones synthesized by placenta decrease
action of insulin - 4 of pregnancies 7 of Caucasian women
- Routine screening at 20 - 28 weeks gestation
- Risks to fetus mother
- Increased birth weight (C-section), low blood
glucose, trauma, malformations - Usually disappears after birth but is linked to
diabetes later in life for mother
16Pregnancy Complications
- Pregnancy-induced hypertension
- High-risk disorder
- Preeclampsia (mild form)
- Eclampsia (severe form)
- Signs
- Elevated blood pressure, protein in the urine,
edema, change in blood clotting - Convulsions in third trimester
- Liver and kidney damage, leading to death
17Nutrition in Infants
- Nutrition in Infancy
- ? Water 100-150ml/kg/day
- ? Protein 2-3gm/kg/day
- ? Lipids 3.8-6.0 gm/kg/day (MCT and EFA)
- ? Carbohydrate40-50 of total calories
- ? Calcium 400-600mg/day
- ? Iron 6-10mg/day
- ? Fluoride, vitamin D, vitamin K
18Recommendations for Infants
- ? The WHO recommends human milk as the exclusive
nutrient source for feeding full-term infants
during the first 6 months after birth - ? Regardless of when complementary foods are
introduced, breastfeeding should be continued
through the first 12 months
19Breast Milk Content
- ? Human milk contains protective antibodies
against enteric infections - ? Caloric density is the same in breast milk and
regular infant formulas(20kcal/oz) - ? Fat absorption is more efficient in breastfed
infants when compare to infant formulas
20Breast Milk/Formula Content
- ? Human milk has higher concentration of
essential fatty acid - ? Formula has higher protein concentration
(1.5g/dl in formula vs.0.9g/dl in breast milk) - whey/casein in human milk- 8020
- whey/casein in formula-1882
- ? Whey protein promotes gastric emptying
- ? Whey protein have more lactoferrin and
secretory immunoglobulin A - ? Lactose content is equal in breast milk and
infant formula - ? Calcium/Phosphorus ratio in human milk is
higher compared to formula (21 vs. 1.51) - ? Human milk has lower iron concentration but
iron from human milk is more bio-available
21Infection and Breast Milk
- ? Human milk may be a source of CMV
- ? Human milk is protective against
enteropathogenic E.coli and other GI pathogens.
This protection is greatest during the infants
first 3 months of life and declines with
increasing age - ? Human milk is not protective against HSV
- ? Breastfeeding is contraindicated in HIV
infection, except in underdeveloped countries - ? Human milk does not protect against
M.tuberculosis
22Infant Benefits of Breastfeeding
- ? Protein in breast milk is more easily digested
that protein in infants formula - ? Human milk protein promotes more rapid gastric
emptying - ? Fat absorption from human milk is more
efficient when compared to formula - ? Many factors in human milk may stimulate
gastrointestinal growth and motility as well as
enhance the maturity of the gastrointestinal
track - ? Human milk contains specific protein involved
in host defense - Infants who are breastfed for at least 13 weeks
had significantly less gastrointestinal and
respiratory illnesses - ? Breast milk appears to be protective against
some food allergies during infancy and early
childhood - ? Maternal-infant bonding is enhanced during
breastfeeding - ? Improved long-term cognitive and motor
abilities in full term infants have been directly
correlated with duration of breastfeeding
23Breast Milk vs. Cows Milk vs. Iron-Fortified
Formulas
Product Energy (Cal/oz) Protein (g/oz) Carbs (g/oz) Fat (g/oz) Cholesterol (mg/oz) Iron (mg/oz) Calcium (mg/oz)
Human milk 22.5 0.32 2.12. 1.35 4.00 0.01 10.0
Cows milk, whole 20.1 1.08 1.60 1,08 3.00 0.01 34.0
Cows milk, fat-free 10.8 1.08 1.56 0.03 1.00 0.01 38.0
Similac 20.0 0.41 2.10 1.08 1.00 0.36 16.0
Enfamil 20.0 0.42 2.19 1.07 0.00 .0.36 16.0
ProSobee 20 0.50 2.13 1.07 0.00 0.36 21.0
Isomil 20 0.49 2.04 1.09 0.00 0.36 21.0
24Mother Benefits
- ? Postpartum weight loss and uterine involution
may be more rapid in women who breastfeed - ? Exclusive breastfeeding delays the resumption
of normal ovarian cycles and return of fertility
in most mothers - ? Epidemiological studies have identified a
decreased incidence of premenopausal breast
cancer and ovarian cancer in women who have
lactated
25Infant and Nutrition
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27Dietary Fat
- ? No fat restriction for children less than 2y
- ? Nonfat and low-fat milk not recommended in the
1st 2 years of life - ? Fat intake should be decreased during toddlers
years, to provide 30 of total energy - ? Lower limit of energy from fat should be 20
28Baby Bottle Caries
29What not to Feed an Infant
30Dietary Guidelines in Childhood
- ? Structured 3 meals and 2 snacks
- ? Adults should decide when food is offered
- ? Eating should occur in a designated area with
the developmentally appropriate chair - ? No grazing between meals
- ? For preschoolers offer 1 tablespoon of each
food for every year of age - ? Snacks should be considered mini-meals
31Children Daily food Plan
Energy/Food Groups 2-3 years 4-5 years
Calories 1000 1200
Grains 3 oz 4 oz
Vegetables 1 cup 1.5 cups
Fruits 1 cup 1 cup
Milk 2 cups 2 cups
Meat 2 oz 2 oz
Oils 3tsp 4 tsp
32School-age Children Daily Food Plan
Food Group Age 6-7, Girls Age 6-7, Boys Age 8 Both Age 9-10. Girls Age 9-10, Boys Age 11-12, Girls Age 11-12, Boys
Calories 1200 1400 1400 1400 1600 1600 1800
Grains 3 oz 4 oz 4 oz 4 oz 5 oz 5 oz 6 oz
Veg 1.5 cups 1.5 cups 1.5 cups 1.5 cups 2 cups 2 cups 2.5 cups
Fruit 1 cup 1.5 cups 1.5 cups 1.5 cups 1.5 cups 1.5 cups 1.5 cups
Milk 2 cups 2 cups 2 cups 2 cups 3 cups 3 cups 3 cups
Meat 3 oz 4 oz 4 oz 4 oz 5 oz 5 oz 5 oz
Oil 4 tsp 4 tsp 4 tsp 4 tsp 5 tsp 5 tsp 5 tsp
33Adolescent Nutrition
- ? Recommended daily allowances (RDA) for energy
based on the median energy intake - ? Assessment of energy needs should consider
appetite, growth, activity and weight gain in
relation to deposition of subcutaneous fat - ? Restricted food intake in physically active
adolescents results in diminished growth, drop in
basal metabolic rate and amenorrhea - ? Requirements for energy, calcium, nitrogen and
iron determined by increases in Lean Body Mass
34Nutritional Concerns in Adolescence
- ? The low energy intake creates difficulties in
planning diets with adequate levels of nutrients - ? RDA for energy do not include a safety factor
for increased energy needs (illness) - ? Protein needs correlate more with growth
pattern than with chronological age - ? Due to accelerated muscular and skeletal
growth, calcium need is higher - ? Need for iron is increased to sustain the
rapidly enlarging LBM and hemoglobin mass - ? Iron needed to offset menstrual losses
- ? Zinc is essential for growth and sexual
maturation - ? Growth retardation and hypogonadism have been
reported in adolescent boys with Zinc deficiency
35Nutrition Concerns in Adolescents
- ? Vegetarian adolescents at risk for deficiencies
of vitamin D, B 12, riboflavin, protein, calcium,
iron, zinc and trace elements - ? Dental caries are common (low fluoride intake,
high carbohydrate intake) - ? NHANES reports obesity in 14 of adolescent
ages 12-19 - ? Chronic disease in adolescent may affect
nutritional status
36Adolescents Daily Food Plan
Energy/Food Group 13 yo, Girls 14-18 yo, Girls 19-20 yo, Girls 13-15 yo, Boys 16-18 yo, boys 19-20 yo boys
Calories 1600 1800 2000 2000 2400 2600
Grains 5 oz 6 oz 6 oz 6 oz 8 oz 9 oz
Veg 2 cups 2.5 cups 2.5 cups 2.5 cups 3 cups 3.5 cups
Fruits 1.5 cups 1.5 cups 2 cups 2 cups 2 cups 2 cups
Milks 3 cups 3 cups 3 cups 3 cups 3 cups 3 cups
Meat 5 oz 5 oz 5.5 oz 5.5 oz 6.5 oz 6.5 oz
Oils 5 tsp 5 tsp 6 tap 6 tap 7 tap 7 tap
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40The Elderly Currently Underutilize
- Resources To Combat Malnutrition
- ?? 22 Use Community Services
- ?? 15 Use Senior Centers
- ?? 8 Eat Meals at Senior Centers
- ?? 2 Receive Home Delivered Meals
41Poorly Nourished Older Adults
- ?? Greater morbidity/mortality
- ?? Declining functional status
- ?? Greater rates of hospital admission/readmission
(ALOS 2days 4x hospitalization rate) - ?? Higher rate of complications (Tenfold increase
in nosocomial infection rate)
42As we age
- Body Composition
- Total Body Fat
- Muscle Mass
- Total body water
- Bone Mass (with ? potential of fracture)
- Dentition
Body Functions gt dry mouth lt taste / smell lt
thirst (with ? potential of dehydration) ?
anorexia with ? appetite ? T cell and B cell
activity lt GFR lt activity of drug
metabolizing enzymes lt availability of
nutrients via absorption / digestion
43Food Pyramid for Older Adults
- Key Considerations
- More water/fluids on a daily basis
- Fewer calories/Encourage physical activity
- More fiber
- Consider supplements
- calcium, vitamin D and B12
44Older Adults (70) Daily Food Plan
Energy/Food group Females Males
Calories 1600 2000
Grains 5 oz 6 oz
Veg 2 cups 2.5 cups
Fruits 1.5 cups 2 cups
Milk 3 cups 3 cups
Meat 5 oz 5.5 oz
Oil 5 tsp 6 tsp
45Conclusions for the class
- Eating habits are learned
- Eating is ..
- Nutrition is
- Exercise is