Title: Introduction to Human Nutrition
1Introduction to Human Nutrition
2Chapter 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
3Nutrition Defined
- Nutrition the science of foods and the
nutrients and other substances they contain and
their actions in the body.
4Nutrition Defined
- Actions in the body include
- Ingestion
- Digestion
- Absorption
- Transport
- Metabolism
- Excretion
5Whats Considered Food?
- Foods contain nutrients and are derived from
plant or animal sources - Nutrients are used by the body to provide energy
and to support growth, maintenance and repair of
body tissues - 40 nutrients identified at this time
6Nutrients
- Multiple ways to classify the nutrients.
- Nutrients can be classified as
- Carbohydrate, protein (6 classes)
- Essential or nonessential
- Organic/inorganic
- Energy yielding
7Classifying Nutrients
- 6 Classes of Nutrients
- 1. Carbohydrates
- 2. Lipids (fats)
- 3. Proteins
- 4. Vitamins
- 5. Minerals
- 6. Water
8Body Composition
9Classifying 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) - Examples
- Vitamins
- Calcium, iron, and other minerals
- Some of the amino acids
10Essential Nutrients
- To be classified as an essential nutrient
- The biological function of nutrient is known
- Omission from the diet leads to a decline in a
biological function - Return of the nutrient restores the biological
function
11Classifying Nutrients
- Nonessential nutrients body can make from other
nutrients ingested - ? Examples
- Cholesterol
- Some amino acids
12Classifying Nutrients by Composition
- Organic nutrients - contain carbon
- Carbohydrates
- Lipids
- Proteins
- Vitamins
- Inorganic nutrients - do not contain carbon
- Minerals
- Water
13Classifying Nutrients
- Energy-yielding nutrients (3)
- Carbohydrates
- Fats
- Proteins
- Where does the energy come from?
14A 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
15Energy in the Body
- The body uses the energy yielding nutrients to
fuel all activities - Remember, all energy yielding nutrients are
caloric.
16Energy-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..
17Energy-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
18Energy-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.
19Energy-Yielding Non-nutrient
- Alcohol C, H, O
- 7 kcal/gram
- Not considered a nutrient as it interferes with
life functions - Alcohol metabolites are harmful!
20Evaluating a Food Label
- _____ grams carbohydrate
- _____ grams fat
- _____ grams protein
- TOTAL KCAL ____________
21Energy 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
226 Classes of Nutrients
- Carbohydrates
- Lipids (fats)
- Proteins
- Vitamins
- Minerals
- Water
23Vitamins
- Essential
- Organic, micronutrient
- Not energy-yielding
- Can be water-soluble or fat-soluble
- Examples
24Minerals
- Essential
- Inorganic, micronutrient
- Major minerals Ca, P, Na
- Trace minerals Fe, Zn
- Not energy-yielding
- Indestructible
25Water
- Water (H2O)
- Essential
- Organic or inorganic?
- Noncaloric
- We are 60 water
26Not everyone has access to clean water
27Nutrition Defined
- NO NUTRIENT WORKS ALONE
- Need regular adequate intake of all nutrients for
optimal functioning. - Best obtained from food not supplements.
- WHY????
28Nutrition and Health
- Nutrition and health are closely related
- Chronic health issues associated with diet
- Obesity
- Type II Diabetes
- Osteoporosis
- See page 25
29Leading Causes Death - US
- Heart disease 616,067
- Cancer 562,875
- Stroke 135,952
- Chronic respiratory diseases 127,924
- Accidents (unintentional injuries) 123,706
- Alzheimer's disease 74,632
- Diabetes 71,382
- Influenza and Pneumonia 52,717
- Kidney disease 46,448
- Septicemia 34,828 CDC,
2009
30Improving 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
31Improving Health
- Risk factors in your control
- Smoking
- Alcohol intake
- Over-consumption of calories
- Physical inactivity
- Poor quality diet
32Improving Health
- Risk factors you cannot control
- Age
- Gender
- Genetics (family history)
- Ethnicity
33Maine 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)
34Evaluating 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
35Evaluating Nutritional Status
- Personal History
- SES
- living situation
- personal health
- family health history
- Educational level..
- Diet History
36Evaluating Nutritional Status
- Anthropometric data
- Height and weight
- Waist circumference
- body fat
- Physical exam
- Hair, skin, eyes, tongue
- Laboratory Tests
- Cholesterol levels
- Iron levels
-
37Nutritional Deficiencies
- Primary vs. secondary deficiency
- Primary inadequate intake of the nutrient
- Secondary body doesnt absorb adequate amounts,
excretes too much. - Body mishandles the nutrient
38Nutritional Deficiencies
- Overt vs. covert deficiency
- Overt outward signs of the deficiency
- Covert may be detected by lab tests, but no
outward signs of the deficiency - Sub-clinical deficiency
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40Levels of Nutritional Status
- Ideal nutrition
- Intake is sufficient to meet daily needs and to
keep nutritional stores full while maintaining a
healthy body weight
41Borderline Nutrition
- Intake is sufficient to meet daily needs, but not
enough to keep reserves full - Body is not prepared to handle times of stress
- Illness, pregnancy
- May slows growth and development of fetus and
growing child
42Undernutrition
- Intake does not meet daily caloric and nutrient
needs and nutrient reserves are empty for
some/all nutrients - There is a decline in body functions due to the
lack of nutrients - Can be life threatening
- Medical intervention required
43Under-nourished
- Populations at increased risk
- anyone living in poverty
- especially infants, children, pregnant women,
elderly - elderly in general, including those living in
nursing homes - pregnant teens
- drug and alcohol addicts
- individuals with eating disorders
- anyone with prolonged illness, including hospital
patients
44Malnourished
- The term malnourished is commonly used in
reference to chronic under-nutrition - It can also be used in reference to anyone with
chronic poor nutrition that results in failing
health
45Over-Nutrition
- Another form of malnourishment
- excessive caloric intake that leads to obesity
- Increase risk of obesity related diseases
- heart disease, diabetes.
- overuse of vitamin supplements that leads to
toxicity symptoms
46The Science of Nutrition
- One of the newest sciences
- New branch is nutritional genomics
- Study of the interaction of nutrients with
DNA/genes and how those genes impact health - Like all sciences, nutrition is based on
scientific research
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48Observations and Questions
- Make observations about diet and health. These
observations lead to questions - For example
- The incidence of breast cancer is much lower in
Japan than in the U.S. - Diet in Japan is rich in..while in U.S. diet is
rich in - Question?
49Develop Hypotheses and Make Predictions
- Hypothesis tentative explanation of the
observations or answer to the question - Make prediction If the hypothesis is true what
else is true?
50Experiments
- Conduct experiments to test the predictions
- Easier said than done when people are involved!
- Well consider research designs later/soon.
51One Experimental Design
- When possible, randomly assign subjects to either
a control of experimental group - Goal is for two groups to be as similar to each
other as possible - Control Group either no change to diet or given
a placebo - Experimental group diet changed or given a
supplement
52Experimental Design
- Compare the health/lab values of the two groups
before and after the diet change. - Example DASH diet study
53Analyze results
- Analyze results
- Draw conclusions about the validity of the
hypothesis - Test alternate hypotheses
- Share findings
- Publish in nutritional journals
- Present findings at conferences
54The Science of Nutrition
- Commonly used research designs (pg 13,14)
- Epidemiological study (observe)
- Cross-sectional
- Case-controlled
- Cohort (longitudinal)
- Experimental (intervene)
- Animal studies
- Human clinical trials
- Lab studies
55The Science of Nutrition
- 1. Epidemiological studies
- Study of populations
- Look for correlations between dietary practices
and health -
56Epidemiological Studies
- Cross-sectional
- Study of a population at a given point in time
- Look for correlations between dietary practices
and health - 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 -
57Epidemiological 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
58Experimental 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
59Clinical 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.
60Experimental 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?
61Experimental Studies
- Lab-Based Studies
- Also called in vitro studies
- Examine impact of a substance on living tissue in
a test tube
62The Science of Nutrition
- Size matters
- Good studies have relatively large sample sizes
- Preliminary studies have smaller sample sizes
- Peer review matters
- Information in peer- reviewed research journals
is much more credible than that in popular
magazines, TV, Internet
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64Science Of Nutrition
- From scientific studies come nutritional
recommendations.
65Dietary 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.
66EAR
- Estimated Average Requirements
- Intake amount that appears to meet the needs of
50 of the population (see graphs on page 18) - Age, gender, condition based
- Set after review of many research studies
67RDA
- 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?
68AI
- 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
69UL
- 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
70Other 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!
71Other 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
72Other Recommendations
- Other countries and international organizations
set their own nutritional recommendations - e.g. World Health Organization (WHO)
73Food Choices
- Small group exercise
- What influences your food choices each day?
74Food Choices Text Answers
- Personal preferences
- Habit
- Ethnic heritage
- Tradition
- Social interactions or pressure
- Availability
- Convenience
- Economy
- Positive or negative associations
- Emotional Comfort
- Values -Religious, political, environmental
- Health concerns
- Nutritional value
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