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Title: Your Study Guides


1
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2
Your Study Guides
  • Your lecture notes
  • Powerpoints
  • Exams and quizzes
  • Worksheets and video hand-outs
  • Your diet analyses
  • Text book

3
Final Review
  • This review does not cover the last few subjects,
    so don't forget those
  • Global Nutrition Oral Rehydration solutions,
    Vitamin A Iodine
  • Pregnancy, breastfeeding and infancy
  • Alcohol
  • Food safety
  • Food allergies

4
Calories Energy
  • A calorie is ???
  • What food substances supply fuel for the body
    (energy)? ______
  • And one more ____________
  • Calories per gram of each of above?

5
Energy Processing
  • When I take my daily vitamin pill, I feel more
    energetic. Why?
  • Vitamins, minerals, and water are chemicals
    needed for conversion of carbohydrates, proteins,
    and fats into energy 

6
Essential Nutrients
  • What are essential nutrients?
  • The amount of nutrients needed is different for
    different people. Who is apt to need more
    nutrients?

7
Nutrient Needs
  • Nutrient amounts needed also vary among people
    based on the presence of conditions such
    asPregnancy Breastfeeding Illnesses Drug
    use
  • Environment

8
Table 1-1, p. 11
9
Malnutrition
  • Poor diets affect the intake level of more than
    one nutrient and produce a spectrum of signs and
    symptoms related to multiple nutrient
    deficiencies
  • Malnutrition results from both inadequate and
    excessive availability of calories and nutrients
    in the body
  • Malnutrition results from poor diets and diseases
    that interfere with the bodys ability to use the
    nutrients consumed

10
Fig. 1-11, p. 18
11
Nutrient Density
  • Foods that provide multiple nutrients in
    appreciable amounts relative to calories are
    considered nutrient-dense
  • Foods that provide calories and low amounts of
    nutrients are called empty-calorie foods
  • It is easier to build an adequate diet around
    nutrient-dense foods than around empty calorie
    foods

12
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13
This illustrates the proportionate influence of
different factors on health and longevity
Fig. 2-1, p. 3
14
Today dietary excesses are the problem in the US
  • Slow-developing diseases are called ???
  • Majority of Americans die from
  • ___________ _____________
  • These account for 52 of all deaths
  • Diets high in saturated fat and low in vitamins,
    vegetables and fruits are linked to
  • ____________________________
  • Most common nutritional disorder in the US is ??

15
Obesity
  • Obesity is the most common nutritional disorder
    in the U.S.
  • Two-thirds of adults are overweight or obese, and
    one in six children is overweight
  • Excess fat increases the likelihood of diabetes,
    heart disease, hypertension, and certain types of
    cancer

16
Table 2-2, p. 7
17
Harvard Healthy Eating Pyramid
  • (do review all pyramids)

18
Nutrition Information
  • T/F ? Publicity in media is always true
  • Opinions are protected by Freedom of Speech
  • Illegal to put false or misleading information
    about a product on a product label, in a product
    insert, or in an advertisement
  • But Enforcement is _________

19
Methods of Science
  • Specific methods employed vary depending on the
    type of research
  • Scientific studies are carefully planned
  • First process is stating question
  • Question transformed to explicit hypothesis
  • Hypothesis is then proved or disproved by the
    research

20
What Type of Research Design Should Be Used?
  • Epidemiological studies identify conditions and
    specific health events
  • Clinical trials test the effects of a treatment
    or intervention
  • Clinical trials require an experimental group
    compared to a control group
  • A double-blind procedure eliminates bias
  • Placebo effect is __________??

21
Science and Nutrition
  • Science is based on facts and evidence
  • Grounding ethic of scientists is that facts and
    evidence are more sacred than any other
    consideration
  • These characteristics of science and scientists
    are strong assets for the job of identifying
    truths
  • Nonetheless, scientists are only human

22
Personal Decisions
  • Imperfect as they are, only scientific studies
    produce information about nutrition you can count
    on
  • Look for studies that are repeated by other
    scientists, with similar results
  • Evidence is the best ingredient for
    decision-making about nutrition and your health

23
Nutrition Labeling
  • Misleading messages led to nutrition labeling
    laws
  • Consumers wanted content information
  • 1990 Nutrition Labeling and Education Act
  • By 1993 rules for nutrition labeling were
    published
  • Implementation and revisions of standards are
    ongoing

24
Food Labels
  • Nutrition Facts panel provides details of
    nutrient content and ingredients in food inside
  • Simplifies comparison of similar foods

25
Whats on Your Label?
  • Nutrition Facts panel
  • What is the serving size?
  • How many servings per package?
  • Trans fat?
  • Nutrition claim?
  • Health claim?
  • Ingredient label
  • Fortified or enriched ingredients?
  • Allergenic ingredients? Food additives?

26
Diet Affects Mental Performance World
  • ? Deficiency of protein, calories in infancy
    and early childhood
  • Deficiencies of iron and iodine during fetal
    development, infancy and early childhood
  • Fetal alcohol exposure
  • Minerals iodine and mercury

27
Children in United States
  • Common dietary events that impair learning
  • breakfast skipping
  • fetal exposure to alcohol
  • iron deficiency

28
Is Knowledge Alone Enough to guarantee a good
diet?
  • What are barriers to a good diet for Americans?
  • Why will someone decide to change their diet?
  • What actions can they take to make a change most
    likely to succeed?
  • Do people sometimes, through lack of knowledge,
    make the wrong changes?

29
Key Concepts and Facts
  • Healthy diets are characterized by adequacy and
    balance
  • There are many types of healthy diets, including
    vegetarian and flexitarian
  • The Dietary Guidelines for Americans as well as
    food guides from other countries Harvard
    University provide foundation information for
    healthy diets

30
Fig. 6-8, p. 13
31
Digestion basic for nutrition
32
From the Liver Bile
  • Fluid containing water, electrolytes and many
    organic molecules including bile acids,
    cholesterol, phospholipids and bilirubin
  • Bile acids, needed for digestion and absorption
    of fats and fat-soluble vitamins in the small
    intestine.
  • Many waste products are eliminated from the body
    by secretion into bile and elimination in feces.
    Remember, cholesterol is excreted this way with
    the help of Vitamin C in the liver fiber in the
    digestive tract.

33
PolysaccharidesStarch, cellulose
glycogenconsist of linked glucose molecules
34
Lactose IntoleranceNormal
  • Caused by ________________?
  • Usually begins after age ?? (natural weaning
    age)
  • Lactose in the large intestine symptoms of
    lactose intolerance.
  • Bloated feeling and diarrhea due to fluid
    accumulation
  • Gas and abdominal cramping
  • Solution Lactaid tablets or Lactose-free dairy
    products
  • Usually yogurt, cheese and buttermilk okay
  • Or substitute calcium-fortified juice or soy milk

35
Table 8-1, p. 3
36
Table 8-2, p. 4
37
Fig. 8-7, p. 9
38
Fig. 9-1, p. 3
39
Fig. 9-5, p. 6
40
The Carbohydrates
  • Simple sugars are small molecules
  • Two types monosaccharides and disaccharides
  • Monosaccharides
  • Glucose (blood sugar or dextrose)
  • Fructose (fruit sugar)
  • Galactose
  • Disaccharides consist of two linked molecules
  • Glucose and a fructose make sucrose (or table
    sugar)
  • Glucose and a galactose make lactose (milk
    sugar)

41
Simple Sugar Facts
  • Disaccharides are broken into monosaccharides
    during digestion
  • Only glucose, fructose, and galactose are
    absorbed into bloodstream
  • High-fructose corn syrup and alcohol sugars are
    also simple sugars
  • Most simple sugars have a sweet taste

42
Carbohydrates Glucose
  • The body uses glucose for energy
  • Fructose and galactose converted to glucose
  • The liver and muscles store glucose as the
    polymer _______?
  • _________ is chains of linked glucose units
  • Whats so bad about Sugar? ???

43
Whats So Bad about Sugar?
  • Foods with simple sugars are poor sources of
    nutrients
  • Simple sugars provide only calories
  • Many foods high in sugars are also high in
    ____???
  • Likelihood diets will be insufficient in vitamins
    and minerals increases with sugar intake
  • Sweets causes tooth decay

44
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45
Protein
  • Integral structural component of muscle, bone,
    connective tissues, organs, red blood cells and
    hemoglobin, hair, and fingernails
  • Basic substance that makes up digestive and other
    enzymes in the human body
  • Major component of hormones such as insulin
  • Protein also serves as an energy source

46
Collagen
  • The principal protein of skin, bones, teeth,
    cartilage, tendons, blood vessels, heart valves,
    inter vertebral discs, cornea and eye lens
  • Vitamin C (ascorbic acid) is required for the
    maintenance of collagen

47
Protein Dynamics
  • A 154-pound man has 24 lbs of protein
  • All protein is broken down and re-built
  • Protein turnover uses 9 oz each day
  • We only consume 2-3 oz per day
  • Most protein is recycled from protein substances
    being turned over
  • Proteins play key roles in repair of tissues and
    replacing tissue proteins damaged by illness or
    injury

48
High Protein Intakes
  • Generally accompanied by high-fat and low-fiber
    intakes
  • Foods high in protein (hamburger, cheese, eggs)
    are often high in fat and contain little or no
    fiber
  • Even lean meats provide a large part of their
    total calories as fat

49
Amino Acids
  • The building blocks of protein are amino acids
  • Protein in food is broken down by digestive
    enzymes and absorbed into the bloodstream as
    amino acids
  • 20 common amino acids form proteins when linked
    together
  • Protein in the body is a unique combination of
    amino acids linked together in chains
  • DNA is genetic material that directs protein
    synthesis and organizes amino acids into chains

50
Essential Amino Acids
  • Nine of the 20 common amino acids are considered
    essential
  • 11 are nonessential
  • All 20 are required to build and maintain protein
    tissues
  • Body cannot produce essential amino acids, so
    they must be provided by the diet
  • Food proteins contain essential and nonessential
    amino acids

51
Proteins Differ in Quality
  • How proteins support tissue construction is
    protein quality
  • High quality have a balance of essential amino
    acids to support tissue needs
  • If essential amino acids are missing, proteins
    can not be built
  • When required level of essential amino acid is
    lacking, remaining amino acids are used for
    energy

52
Complete Proteins
  • What do we mean by complete proteins?
  • Plant proteins are incomplete except for soy
  • Vegetarians complement essential amino acid
    composition of plant protein by combining them to
    form complete protein through the day.

53
Amino Acid Supplements
  • Amino acids are natural, so people think theyre
    harmless
  • But high intakes of amino acids can harm health
  • High amounts disrupt protein synthesis by causing
    a surplus of some amino acids and a deficit of
    others

54
Amino Acid Supplements Can
  • cause loss of appetite, diarrhea, and
    gastrointestinal upsets
  • increase the workload of the liver and kidneys
  • Increase risk of dehydration
  • Neither Amino Acid Supplements nor Protein
    Supplements help build muscles.

55
Too Little Protein
  • Protein deficiency usually occurs with deficiency
    of calories and other nutrients
  • Protein foods also contain iron, zinc, vitamin
    B12, niacin
  • Body protein will be used for energy during
    starvation
  • Body will take protein from liver, intestines,
    heart, muscles, other organs and tissues
  • Loss of 30 of body protein yields reduced body
    strength for breathing, susceptibility to
    infection, abnormal organ functions, and death

56
Marasmus
  • Protein deficiency and lack of calories cause
    marasmus, or protein-energy malnutrition
  • Frequent where hunger and famine are common
  • Occurs among people with anorexia nervosa and
    diseases such as cancer and AIDS
  • Individuals with marasmus look starved
  • They have little body fat
  • Must utilize protein from muscles, liver, and
    tissues as an energy source

57
Marasmus, Protein- calorie Malnutrition
58
Marasmus
  • Children are apathetic, highly susceptible to
    infection, have dry skin and brittle hair, and
    skin and bones appearance
  • Use of the fat pads in the cheeks (last fat used
    for energy during starvation) gives children with
    marasmus appearance of an old person
  • Accompanied by vitamin and mineral deficiencies
  • Conditions are complicated by infection,
    diarrhea, and dehydration

59
Trends
  • 2/3 of U.S. protein comes from ?? products
  • Wealth leads to ??? protein increase
  • Increased consumption of fat, too
  • Rates of heart disease and some cancers increase
  • Adequate dietary intakes without excess fat have
    beans and grains mixed with lean meats and
    low-fat dairy products

60
The USA Leads the Way
  • 2/3 of U.S. protein comes from ?? products
  • Wealth leads to ??? protein increase
  • Increased consumption of fat, too
  • Rates of heart disease and some cancers increase
  • Adequate dietary intakes without excess fat have
    beans and grains mixed with lean meats and
    low-fat dairy products

61
Top Ten Causes of Death in US
62
Minerals
  • Calcium
  • 99 of the 3 lbs of calcium in the body is
    located in bones and teeth
  • 1 is found in blood and other body fluids, where
    it has many important roles
  • What disease does Calcium prevent?

63
Bone Formation
  • Bones develop and mineralize throughout the first
    3 decades of life
  • This requires calcium and vitamin D
  • Every day, cells called ????? break bone down
  • Cells called ??????? repair damage by forming
    new, healthy bone.
  • Called remodeling

64
Remodeling Bones
  • During remodeling old protein matrix is replaced
    and remineralized
  • Total bone replacement every 10 years
  • Up until early or mid-30s, osteoblasts make more
    bone than is lost
  • ???? bone density reached between age 30-40

65
Bone Remodeling
  • After that, bone mineral content no longer
    increases
  • The higher the peak bone mass, the less likely it
    is that osteoporosis will develop
  • After age 50, bones tend to demineralize as
    osteoclasts outperform osteoblasts
  • Insufficient calcium is one cause of

66
Osteoporosis
  • 1.5 million suffer broken bones each year due to
    the disease
  • 300,000 hip fractures/year with a 20 death rate
    within one year
  • Require hip replacement
  • What is treatment for Osteoporosis?

67
Osteoporosis Treatment
  • Calcium supplements or intakes to 1000-1500
    milligrams per day
  • Vitamin D supplements (800 IU)
  • Other medications (phosphomax, etc)
  • Weight-bearing exercise (walking, tennis)
    stimulates bone growth and decreases progression
    of osteoporosis

68
Iron
  • Most iron is found in hemoglobin
  • Hundreds of hemoglobin molecules are in each red
    blood cell
  • Blood cells are made in the ?????
  • Small amounts of iron are present in myoglobin in
    other cells

69
Iron Deficiency
  • 1/3 of people in world are iron deficient
  • Enormous loss of human potential and productivity
  • Iron deficiency affects which people? with high
    need and low consumption
  • What are symptoms?

70
Iron-deficiency anemia
  • Develops with additional symptoms
  • People with iron-deficiency anemia
  • look pale
  • are easily exhausted
  • have rapid heart rates
  • Iron-deficiency anemia is problem for infants and
    young children
  • It is related to lasting retardation in mental
    development

71
Blood Pressure Sodium
  • Hypertension is a major public health problem in
    U.S. and other countries
  • Presence of hypertension increases the risk that
    a person will develop heart disease or kidney
    failure or will experience a heart attack or
    stroke
  • Hypertension occurs in what fraction? of U.S.
    adults and more than 26 of adults worldwide
  • How is it treated?

72
How Is Hypertension Treated?
  • Treatment of hypertension includes dietary and
    lifestyle changes, and medications
  • Weight loss, smoking cessation, the DASH diet
  • (Dietary Approaches to Treating Hypertension)
  • Low Sodium Diet, regular exercise
  • moderate alcohol consumption
  • DASH diet more successful than low sodium diet in
    lowering blood pressure levels back into normal
    range
  • Together, they work synergistically.

73
IN THE UNITED STATES
  • Half the people who have hypertension dont know
    it
  • Half of those who know it, arent getting
    treatment
  • Half of those getting treatment, arent treated
    adequately to control BP
  • Many unnecessary strokes, heart attacks, and
    early deaths

74
The End
The End
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