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Introduction to Human Nutrition

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Title: Introduction to Human Nutrition


1
Introduction to Human Nutrition
  • Course Web Page

2
Chapter Outline
  • Nutrition defined
  • Classifying nutrients
  • Energy
  • Nutrition and health
  • Evaluating nutritional status
  • Levels of nutritional status
  • Deficiencies
  • Nutritional research
  • Nutritional recommendations
  • Factors impacting food choices

3
Nutrition Defined
  • Nutrition the science of foods and the
    nutrients and other substances they contain and
    their actions in the body.

4
Nutrition Defined
  • Actions in the body include
  • Ingestion
  • Digestion
  • Absorption
  • Transport
  • Metabolism
  • Excretion

5
Nutrition Defined
  • Nutrients substances in food that are used in
    the body for
  • Energy
  • Structural materials
  • Regulation of body functions
  • Growth, repair and maintenance of tissues
  • 40 nutrients identified at this time

6
Nutrients
  • Multiple ways to classify the nutrients.
  • Nutrients can be classified as
  • Carbohydrate, protein (6 classes)
  • Essential or nonessential
  • Organic/inorganic
  • Energy yielding

7
Classifying Nutrients
  • 6 Classes of Nutrients
  • 1. Carbohydrates
  • 2. Lipids (fats)
  • 3. Proteins
  • 4. Vitamins
  • 5. Minerals
  • 6. Water

8
Classifying Nutrients
  • Essential nutrients nutrients the body either
    cannot make or cannot make enough of to meet its
    needs.
  • These nutrients must be obtained from foods
    (ingested in some manner)

9
Classifying Nutrients
  • Examples of essential nutrients
  • Vitamins
  • Calcium, iron, and other minerals
  • Some of the amino acids

10
Classifying Nutrients
  • Nonessential nutrients body can make from other
    nutrients ingested
  • ? Examples
  • Cholesterol
  • Some amino acids

11
Classifying Nutrients
  • Organic nutrients - contain carbon
  • Carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, vitamins
  • Inorganic nutrients - do not contain carbon
  • Minerals and water

12
Classifying Nutrients
  • Energy-yielding nutrients (3)
  • Carbohydrates
  • Fats
  • Proteins
  • Where does the energy come from?

13
A little more on energy.
  • Measure energy in kilocalories in U.S.
  • Kcal food calorie Cal
  • What most think of as a calorie is really a
    kilocalorie
  • Measure energy in kilojoules (kJ) in most other
    countries

14
Energy in the Body
  • The body uses the energy yielding nutrients to
    fuel all activities
  • Remember, all energy yielding nutrients are
    caloric.

15
Energy in the Body
  • Weight is stable when energy in energy out
  • Extra energy taken in is stored for later use
  • This results in weight gain
  • Store the extra energy as
  • _____________________
  • _____________________
  • Inadequate energy intake results in weight loss

16
Energy-Yielding Nutrients
  • Carbohydrates C, H, O
  • 4 kcal/gram
  • Bodys primary source of energy
  • Use as glucose
  • Brains only source of energy
  • Stores are limited 12-24 hours (in liver and
    muscle)
  • Carbohydrate rich foods..

17
Energy-Yielding Nutrients
  • Fats C, H, O
  • 9 kcal/gram
  • Bodys alternate source of energy
  • Use fat along with glucose as an energy source
    when ..
  • Stores are unlimited

18
Energy-Yielding Nutrients
  • Proteins C, H, O, N, S
  • 4 kcal/gram (same as _______)
  • Bodys least desirable source of energy
  • WHY? .
  • Protein is used for energy when fat when
    carbohydrate stores are empty.

19
Energy-Yielding Non-nutrient
  • Alcohol C, H, O
  • 7 kcal/gram

20
Classifying Nutrients
  • Non-nutrients substances in foods that do not
    fit into one of the 6 nutrient categories
  • Examples
  • Fiber
  • Alcohol
  • Phytochemicals
  • Substances in plants that have biological
    activity in the body

21
6 Classes of Nutrients
  • Carbohydrates
  • Lipids (fats)
  • Proteins
  • Vitamins
  • Minerals
  • Water

22
Vitamins
  • Vitamins
  • Organic, but not caloric
  • Classify as water soluble or water insoluble
  • Vitamins serve many functions in the body
  • E.g. (you dont need to know these examples yet)

23
Minerals
  • Minerals
  • Inorganic, not caloric
  • Play many roles in the body
  • Some play a structural role
  • calcium in bones
  • Some are dissolved in body fluids as ions
  • Sodium, potassium, calcium. Need proper levels
    for muscle and nerve contraction

24
Water
  • Water (H2O)
  • ??organic or inorganic??
  • Noncaloric
  • Essential nutrient
  • .

25
Nutrition Defined
  • NO NUTRIENT WORKS ALONE
  • Need regular adequate intake of all nutrients for
    optimal functioning.
  • Best obtained from food not supplements.
  • WHY????

26
Nutrition and Health
  • Nutrition and health are closely related
  • Chronic health issues associated with diet
  • Obesity
  • Type II Diabetes
  • Osteoporosis
  • See page 24

27
Improving your Health
  • Goal is to reduce the number of risk factors that
    are in your control
  • Risk factor something that statistically
    increases the incidence of a disease
  • Risk factors may not be the cause of the
    disease

28
Improving Health
  • Risk factors in your control
  • Smoking
  • Alcohol intake
  • Over-consumption of calories
  • Physical inactivity
  • Poor quality diet

29
Improving Health
  • Risk factors you cannot control
  • Age
  • Gender
  • Genetics (family history)
  • Ethnicity

30
Maine Data
  • 27 report NO physical activity
  • 21 engage in moderate physical activity 5
    days/week
  • 74 do NOT eat 5 servings of fruits and
    vegetables daily
  • 56 are overweight or obese
  • 20 are obese
  • (2000 data for adults)

31
Evaluating Nutritional Status
  • (4) Components of evaluating nut. status
  • Health and diet history
  • Anthropometric data
  • Height, weight,
  • Physical exam
  • Hair, skin, eyes.
  • Laboratory tests
  • Cholesterol levels, iron levels

32
Levels of Nutritional Status
  • See handout
  • Ideal nutrition .
  • Borderline nutrition ..
  • Malnourished .
  • Who is at greatest risk?
  • Over nutrition
  • 2 aspects
  • Obesity and health

33
Nutritional Deficiencies
  • Primary vs. secondary deficiency
  • Primary inadequate intake of the nutrient
  • Secondary body doesnt absorb adequate amounts,
    excretes too much.
  • Body mishandles the nutrient

34
Nutritional Deficiencies
  • Overt vs. covert deficiency
  • Overt outward signs of the deficiency
  • Covert may be detected by lab tests, but not
    outward signs of the deficiency

35
The Science of Nutrition
  • Nutritional Research
  • Uses scientific method
  • Observations
  • Questions
  • Hypotheses
  • Test hypotheses
  • Analyze data and draw conclusions
  • Share results

36
The Science of Nutrition
  • Commonly used research designs (page 13)
  • Epidemiological study (observe)
  • Cross-sectional
  • Case-controlled
  • Cohort (longitudinal)
  • Experimental (intervene)
  • Animal studies
  • Human clinical trials
  • Lab studies

37
The Science of Nutrition
  • Size matters in research!
  • Good studies have large sample sizes
  • Preliminary studies have smaller sample sizes

38
The Science of Nutrition
  • 1. Epidemiological studies
  • Study of populations
  • Look for correlations between dietary practices
    and health

39
Epidemiological Studies
  • Cross-sectional
  • Study of a population at a given point in time
  • Look for correlations between dietary practices
    and health

40
Epidemiological Studies
  • Case-controlled study
  • Compare diet of similar individuals with and
    without a disease/condition
  • Look for differences in diet that might account
    for the differences in health

41
Epidemiological Studies
  • Cohort or Longitudinal Studies
  • Follow a group of people (a cohort) over a period
    of time
  • Look for differences in diet that might account
    for the differences in health

42
Experimental Studies
  • Clinical or Human Intervention study
  • Randomly assign like people to either the
    experimental or control group
  • Alter the diet of experimental group as compared
    to a control group
  • Compare incidence of disease/lab values/
    performance . of two groups

43
Clinical Trials
  • Terms
  • Blind experiments
  • Subjects do not know which group they are in
  • Double blind experiments
  • Neither subjects nor the researchers know which
    group the subjects are in until after the
    experiment is over
  • Goal is to avoid bias in the reporting/recording
    of the data.

44
Experimental Studies
  • Animal Studies
  • Controlled studies in lab setting using animals
  • Alter diet of experimental group
  • Compare health/lab values of control and
    experimental groups
  • Benefits? .
  • Drawbacks?

45
Experimental Studies
  • Lab-Based Studies
  • Also called in vitro studies
  • Examine impact of a substance on living tissue in
    a test tube
  • --------------------------------------------------
    -----------
  • See page 14 for strengths and weaknesses of the
    research designs

46
Science Of Nutrition
  • From scientific studies come nutritional
    recommendations.

47
Dietary Recommendations
  • Dietary Reference Intakes (DRI)
  • EAR - Estimated Average Requirements
  • RDA Recommended Dietary Allowances
  • AI Adequate Intake
  • UL Tolerable Upper Intake Levels
  • All based on nutritional research.

48
EAR
  • Estimated Average Requirements
  • Intake amount that appears to meet the needs of
    50 of the population (see graphs on page 17)
  • Age, gender, condition based
  • Set after review of many research studies

49
RDA
  • Recommended Dietary Allowances
  • RDA is set to meet the needs of 98 of the
    population (without reaching toxic levels)
  • Set at a level that is higher than many need
  • Why?
  • No RDA for energy.why?

50
AI
  • Adequate Intake (AI)
  • AI average amount of the nutrient that a group
    of healthy people consume
  • AI is set when there isnt enough research to set
    an estimated average requirement (EAR) or RDA
  • Examples Vitamin D, water, fiber

51
UL
  • Tolerable Upper Intake Level (UL)
  • Maximum daily amount of nutrient that appears
    safe for most healthy people
  • Intake above the UL is associated with toxicity
    symptoms
  • Most often see with overuse of supplements or
    intake of many fortified foods

52
Other Recommendations
  • Estimated Energy Requirements (EER)
  • Caloric intake that will maintain energy balance
    in a healthy person
  • Values given are for reference male and female
    who is fairly active
  • Values are not very useful for individuals!

53
Other Recommendations
  • Acceptable Macronutrient Distribution Range
  • or, recommended intake of energy yielding
    nutrients
  • 45-65 of caloric intake from carbohydrate
  • 20-35 of caloric intake from fat
  • 10-35 of caloric intake from protein

54
Other Recommendations
  • Other countries and international organizations
    set their own nutritional recommendations
  • e.g. World Health Organization (WHO)

55
Food Choices
  • Small group exercise
  • What influences your food choices each day?

56
Food Choices Text Answers
  1. Personal preferences
  2. Habit
  3. Ethnic heritage
  4. Tradition
  5. Social interactions or pressure
  6. Availability
  7. Convenience
  • Economy
  • Positive or negative associations
  • Emotional Comfort
  • Values -Religious, political, environmental
  • Health concerns
  • Nutritional value

57
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