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Human Nutrition

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Title: Human Nutrition


1
Human Nutrition
2
Digestive System
3
NutrientsUtilized or Stored Until Needed
4
Food Guide Pyramid
Diet and regular exercise
5
Nutrition - Macronutrients
  • Carbohydrates major energy source, simple or
    complex. Metabolic rate related to glycemic
    index
  • Lipids cell components and energy sources,
    saturated or unsaturated, transfats, omega oils
  • Proteins 20 natural amino acids, building and
    repair, hormones, enzymes
  • Water solvent, thermoregulation, metabolic
    processes

6
Nutrition - Micronutrients
  • Vitamins fat soluble and water soluble
  • Minerals recommended daily allowance (rda)
  • Fiber undigested complex carbs, some evidence
    decreases colon cancer

7
Carbohydrates
  • General formula ratio is for most carbohydrates
    is CH2O
  • Carbohydrate rich foods in their natural state
    are low in calories and high in fiber (AKA as
    cellulose, plant fibers we do not digest).
  • Carbohydrates contain about 4 calories per gram
    (fats about 9 cal per gram).

8
Simple Carbohydrates
  • Also called simple sugars.
  • Simple carbohydrates include monosaccharides and
    disaccharides such as
  • fructose (fruit sugar),
  • sucrose (table sugar) and
  • lactose (milk sugar), as well as several other
    sugars.
  • Simple carbohydrates are sources of quick energy.

9
Complex Carbohydrates
  • Complex carbohydrates include fiber and starches.
  • Found in vegetables, bread, rice, oatmeal, whole
    grains, peas and beans.
  • Meats also provide carbs in the form of
    glycogens.

10
Complex Carbohydrates
  • Complex carbohydrates take longer to be digested,
    so your body needs more time to release these
    carbs into your blood as glucose.
  • This results in sustained energy (stamina).
  • Glycemic Index refers to how quickly foods are
    metabolized. (more about this later)

11
Undigestible Complex Carbohydrates
  • Also called fiber
  • Essential role in large
    intestine health
  • Brushes walls of
    large intestine

12
Carbohydrates and Blood Sugar
  • Carb rich foodsgt Blood Glucose levels
    dramatically
  • Pancreas secretes insulin so that glucose units
    can be taken into body cells for use during
    cellular respiration (producing ATP)

13
Carbohydrates and Blood Sugar
  • Diabetes

14
Blood Sugar
  •  

15
Glucose to Glycogen
16
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17
Glycemic Index
  • High glycemic foods are used quickly and stored
    as fat tissue easily.
  • Low glycemic foods provided more long term energy
    and reduced insulin levels (which is a good
    thing).

18
Glycemic Index
  •  

19
Glycemic Index
  • High glycemic index food consumption results in
    more and more insulin required to have the same
    effect on the tissues
  • This phenomenon is known as insulin resistance,
    and is the first step towards diabetes.

20
Glycemic Index
Highglycemic index Mediumglycemic index Lowglycemic index
Maltose (beer) Rye bread (crispbread) Oatmeal porridge
Cooked parsnips Muesli (no sugar) Wholewheat pasta
Cooked carrots Brown rice Sweet potato
White Rice Cooked beets Dried Peas
Biscuits / cookies Garden peas Apples
Baked potato Boiled potato Pears
Cornflakes / cereal Wholewheat bread Whole milk
Bagels Corn, polenta Kidney beans
White Bread Sultanas / raisins Lentils
Corn chips Orange juice Soybeans
Mangoes Oatmeal biscuits / cookies High water content fruits (melon etc)
Ripe bananas White pasta Apple juice
Papaya Buckwheat black-eye peas
Rice cakes Pinto beans Green vegetables
21
Lipids
  • Triglycerides have the general elements C, H, O
    like carbs except they have much less O. They
    are made of glycerol and fatty acids.
  • Glycerol is a small, 3-carbon molecule with three
    hydroxyl groups.

22
Lipids
  • Fatty acids are long molecules with a polar,
    hydrophilic end and a non-polar, hydrophobic
    "tail". The hydrocarbon chain can be from 14 to
    22 CH2 units long even number of C.

23
Saturated Fats
  • If there are no CC double bonds in the
    hydrocarbon chain, then it is a saturated fatty
    acid (i.e. saturated with hydrogen).
  • These fatty acids form straight chains, and have
    a high melting point.
  • Sources are animals
  • butter and
  • lard (solid at room temp.)

24
Unsaturated Fats
  • If there are CC double bonds in the hydrocarbon
    chain, then it is an unsaturated fatty acid (i.e.
    unsaturated with hydrogen).
  • These fatty acids form bent chains, and have a
    low melting point.

25
Unsaturated Fats
  • Fatty acids with more than one double bond are
    called poly-unsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs).
  • Cold blooded animals (fish) and plants are
    sources omega fatty acids, flax, olive oil,
    canola and sunflower oil.

26
Triglycerides
  • Triglycerides are insoluble in water.
  • They are used for storage, insulation and
    protection in fatty tissue (or adipose tissue)
    found under the skin (sub-cutaneous) or
    surrounding organs.
  • They yield more energy per unit mass than other
    compounds so are good for energy storage (about
    2X more energy).

27
DIETARY CONSIDERATIONS
  • In food chemistry, HYDROGENATED margarine is
    plant unsaturated fatty acid which has had H
    added back to its structure.
  • This results in a margarine which is more solid
    and able to with-stand higher temperatures.
  • Most unsaturated fats are liquids (olive oil,
    canola oil are liquid at room temperature).

28
DIETARY CONSIDERATIONS
  • TRANS FATS Unsaturated fats have a structure
    with kinks these kinks result in a liquid state
    at room temperature.
  • In the early 20th century, a chemical process
    called hydrogenation was developed that converts
    vegetable oils into saturated, more solid fats
    (margarine and vegetable shortening).

29
DIETARY CONSIDERATIONS
  • When it was discovered that eating saturated
    fats increases the risk for coronary heart
    disease, the food industry turned to partial
    hydrogenation.
  • This process lowered the content of saturated fat
    in vegetable shortening and margarine, but also
    dramatically increased the amount of a certain
    kind of fat - trans fat - in our diets, as an
    unavoidable side reaction.

30
DIETARY CONSIDERATIONS
  • While suppliers praised processed vegetable oils
    as healthy unsaturated and cholesterol-free
    substitutes for animal fats, there is now strong
    evidence that introducing trans-fatty acids into
    our diets does more harm than good.

31
Saturated and Unsaturated Fats
32
Phospholipids
  • Phospholipids have a similar structure to
    triglycerides, but with a phosphate group in
    place of one fatty acid chain.
  • There may also be other groups attached to the
    phosphate.

33
Phospholipids
  • Phospholipids have a polar hydrophilic "head"
    (the negatively-charged phosphate group) and two
    non-polar hydrophobic "tails" (the fatty acid
    chains).
  • This mixture of properties is fundamental to
    biology, for phospholipids are the main
    components of cell membranes.

34
Waxes
  • Waxes are formed from fatty acids and long-chain
    alcohols.
  • They are commonly found wherever waterproofing is
    needed, such as in
  • leaf cuticles,
  • insect exoskeletons,
  • birds' feathers and
  • mammals' fur.

35
Waxes - Cholesterol
  • CHOLESTEROL is like a fatty wax. Normally made
    in the liver, it is structural component of nerve
    tissue and cell membranes.
  • It is also used to make various steroid hormones
    including progesterone, testosterone (sex
    hormones in females and males) estradiol, and
    cortisol.
  • Bile salts are breakdown products of cholesterol.

36
Waxes
  • Blood is watery, and cholesterol is fatty. Just
    like oil and water, the two do not mix.
  • To travel in the bloodstream, cholesterol is
    carried in small packages called lipoproteins.
  • The small packages are made of fat (lipid) on the
    inside and proteins on the outside.
  • Two kinds of lipoproteins carry cholesterol
    throughout your body.

37
Waxes
  • It is important to have healthy levels of both
  • Low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol is
    sometimes called bad cholesterol.
  • High amounts of LDL cholesterol leads to a build
    up of cholesterol in arteries.
  • The higher the LDL level in your blood, the
    greater chance you have of getting heart disease.

38
Waxes
  • These form plaque along arteries.
  • When it hardens the arteries we call it
    arteriosclerosis.
  • These can dislodge to plug smaller arteries or
    veinsheart attacks or strokes are possible.
  • They can completely block a vessel resulting in
    an embolism, aneurism, heart attack, stroke.

39
Waxes

40
Waxes
  • High-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol is
    sometimes called good cholesterol.
  • HDL carries cholesterol from other parts of your
    body back to your liver.
  • The liver removes the cholesterol from your body.
  • The higher your HDL cholesterol level, the lower
    your chance of getting heart disease.

41
The cholesterol numbers
42
Things that TEND to increase LDL levels
  • Overweight
  • Physical inactivity
  • Cigarette smoking
  • Excessive alcohol use
  • Very high carbohydrate diet
  • Certain diseases and drugs
  • Genetic disorders.

43
What seems to be the population trend
44
Proteins
  • The polymer of amino acids does not remain like a
    long chain but folds into a three-dimensional
    shape which is the most stable for that sequence
    of amino acids.
  • This shape is called the native conformation for
    that particular protein and is essential for that
    protein's biological activity. i.e. shape is
    everything

45
Proteins
  • The shape may be altered by various factors e.g.
    heat or large pH changes.
  • Once the three-dimensional shape is altered,
    biological activity is lost.
  • The building blocks of proteins are amino acids
  • Contain nitrogen (as well as C, H and O)
  • These are arranged in a very specific order
    determines shape

46
Essential Non-Essential AAs
  • As far as your body is concerned, there are two
    different types of amino acids
  • essential and non-essential.
  • Non-essential amino acids are amino acids that
    your body can create out of other chemicals found
    in your body.
  • Essential amino acids cannot be created, and
    therefore the only way to get them is through
    food.

47
Protein
  • Protein in our diets comes from both animal and
    vegetable sources. Most animal sources (meat,
    milk, eggs) provide what's called "complete
    protein," meaning that they contain all of the
    essential amino acids.
  • Vegetable sources usually are low on or missing
    certain essential amino acids. For example, rice
    is low in isoleucine and lysine.

48
Balancing AAs
  • However, different vegetable sources are
    deficient in different amino acids, and by
    combining different foods you can get all of the
    essential amino acids throughout the course of
    the day.
  • This balancing of amino acids is essential
    because if one amino acid is deficient, an entire
    protein cannot be made sufficiently.

49
Vegetarian Diets
  • Vegetarians need to balance plant source
    proteinseg. Rice with beans.
  • Some vegetable sources contain quite a bit of
    protein -- things like nuts, beans, soybeans,
    etc. are all high in protein. By combining them
    you can get complete coverage of all essential
    amino acids.

50
Types of Vegetarian Diets
  • Pescatarian may include fish but no chicken,
    beef, pork
  • Flexitarian may include some meat time to time
  • Lacto-Ovo vegetarian includes milk products and
    eggs but no meats
  • Vegan do not include any animal products
    including processed foods that may include animal
    products like gelatine, honey.

51
To Get Protein RDA
  • The digestive system breaks all proteins down
    into their amino acids so that they can enter the
    bloodstream.
  • Cells then use the amino acids as building
    blocks.

52
  • This photo is the
  • Nutritional Facts label
  • from a can of tuna.
  • According to the RDA (Recommended Daily
    Allowance) for protein is 0.36 grams of protein
    per pound of body weight. So a 150-pound person
    needs 54 grams of protein per day.
  • From this you can see that your body cannot
    survive strictly on carbohydrates. You must have
    protein.

53
Nutritional label from a can of tuna fish
  • You can see that a can of tuna contains about 32
    grams of protein (this can has 13 grams per
    serving and there are 2.5 servings in the can).
  • A glass of milk contains about 8 grams of
    protein.
  • A slice of bread might contain 2 or 3 grams of
    protein.
  • You can see that it is not that hard to meet the
    RDA for protein with a normal diet.

54
Role of Insulin
  • Insulin is a simple protein in which two
    polypeptide chains of amino acids are joined by
    disulfide linkages.
  • It transfers glucose into cells to produce energy
    for the body.
  • In adipose (fat) tissue, insulin facilitates the
    storage of glucose and its conversion to fatty
    acids.

55
Role of Insulin
  • Insulin also slows the breakdown of fatty acids.
  • In muscle it promotes the uptake of amino acids
    for making proteins.

56
Role of Insulin
  • In the liver it helps convert glucose into
    glycogen (the storage carbohydrate of animals)
    and it decreases gluconeogenesis (the formation
    of glucose from noncarbohydrate sources like fat
    or protein).
  • The action of insulin is opposed by glucagon,
    another pancreatic hormone, and by epinephrine.

57
If glucose levels remain high, the liver
  • stores the sugars as glycogen (animal starch).
  • If the glycogen is not used up, it further
    metabolizes glycogen into fatty acids and fat
    molecules.
  • These are transported around the body in blood
    vessels and lymphatic vessels and is stored in
    ADIPOSE tissue (fat tissue) until needed.

58
If glucose levels remain high, the liver
  • This provides smoothness under the skin,
    protection, and a secondary source of energy when
    needednot all fat is bad.
  • If we dont use it regularly though, it builds up
    into unhealthy situations such as fatty tissue
    around the heart and in the blood vessels. (Long
    Term Storage)

59
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62
Disposal by Various Tissues of a Hypothetical
Meal Containing 100 g of Glucose
http//www.medscape.com/infosite/diabetes_educatio
n/article-3
63
Extreme starvation situations (dieting)
  • After immediate energy sources are used (like
    carbohydratesincluding stored glycogen converted
    to blood sugar), fat reserves are used.
  • After fat reserves are used, the body begins to
    call-up proteins. Proteins are converted into
    an energy source as a last resort.

64
Extreme starvation situations (dieting)
  • This is damaging to our protein rich tissues
    (muscles, hair, nails) and we notice the
    differences in our eyes, nails, hair and skin
    texture.
  • It also damages skeletal muscles and heart
    muscle. These damages are not easily reversed by
    proper dieting later.

65
PRIORITIZED SOURCES OF ENERGY
  • Sugars
  • Fats
  • Proteins
  • This site slightly detailed metabolic pathways
    that describe biochemical processes in
    metabolism
  • http//users.humboldt.edu/rpaselk/BiochSupp/Pathwa
    yDiagrams/PathIndex.html

66
http//users.humboldt.edu/rpaselk/BiochSupp/Pathwa
yDiagrams/StagesCat.gif
67
1991 study published in the "The American Journal
of Clinical Nutrition"
  • Showed that patients following a very low-calorie
    diet
  • lost lean body mass and experienced a decrease in
    metabolic rate after only three days.
  • Then, 21 days after the start of the diet,
    participants experienced an 18 percent decrease
    in metabolism and lean body mass, on
    average.Read more http//www.livestrong.com/arti
    cle/486748-dieting-muscle-atrophy/ixzz1eyOOO3A7

68
GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF WEIGHT CONTROL
  • Body weight is always the result of a simple
    equation. Input vs. Output Body Weight
  • Input refers to the amount of food consumed.
  • Output refers to the amount of energy expended.

69
GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF WEIGHT CONTROL
  • Therefore, if Output Input you will maintain
    your present weight.
  • If Input is less than Output you will lose
    weight. If Input is greater than Output you will
    gain weight.
  • There is no short cut to weight loss.
  • One pound of body weight 3,500 kcal or
    32,000kj.

70
GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF WEIGHT CONTROL
  • In order to reduce body weight you must do one of
    the following
  • Decrease food intake
  • Increase activity
  • Do a combination of both (this is most effective)

71
The problem with diets
  • Nutrition
  • Abnormal (not a lifestyle change)
  • Loss of muscle mass
  • E.g. -A person who diets and loses 10 lbs. loses
    both fat and muscle tissue.
  • -When these 10 lbs are regained they are in the
    form of just fat tissue.
  • -The person now has more fat tissue than before
    the diet even though their weight is the same as
    at the outset.

72
GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF WEIGHT CONTROL
  • All weight loss is the result of a loss in
    muscle and fat tissue.
  • To offset this loss of muscle mass exercise must
    accommodate any weight loss program.
  • An increase in exercise does two things to aid in
    weight loss
  • It increases caloric expenditure.
  • It increases metabolism by increasing muscle mass
  • i.e. A larger engine burns more fuel.

73
A recommended program would be
  • Decreasing intake by 200 kcal/day
  • Increasing activity by 300 kcal/day
  • 500 kcal/day 3,500 1 lb/wk.
  • Any successful weight loss program must be a
    lifestyle change not a fad.
  • Exercise must accommodate diet in order to offset
    muscle loss and increase metabolism.
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