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Chapter 7: Nutrition for Life

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Chapter 7: Nutrition for Life Section 1: Carbohydrates, Fats, and Proteins Section 2: Vitamins, Minerals, and Water Section 3: Meeting Your Nutritional Needs – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 7: Nutrition for Life


1
Chapter 7 Nutrition for Life
  • Section 1 Carbohydrates, Fats, and Proteins
  • Section 2 Vitamins, Minerals, and Water
  • Section 3 Meeting Your Nutritional Needs
  • Section 4 Choosing a Healthful Diet

2
Section 1 Carbohydrates, Fats, and Proteins
  • Nutrition
  • Science or study of food
  • Way body uses food
  • Study of how and why we make food choices
  • Nutrients
  • Substances in food
  • Provide energy
  • Help form body tissues
  • Necessary for life and
  • growth

3
Six Classes of Nutrients
  • Six classes of nutrients in food
  • Carbohydrates
  • Fats
  • Proteins
  • Vitamins
  • Minerals
  • Water
  • Nutrients
  • Need right amount each day
  • Too little - weight loss, poor growth, death
  • To much food - weight gain
  • Improper nutrition - short-term and long-term
    health consequence

4
Food Fuel for Your Body
  • Food - fuel that runs body.
  • Nutrients that provide energy - carbohydrates,
    fats, and proteins (NOT vitamins, minerals,
    water)
  • Energy in food measured in calories.
  • Metabolism - Chemical processes in body that
    breaks down and converts food to usable energy.

5
Food Energy and Calories
  • 1 gram of carbohydrate has 4 k/cal
  • 1gram of protein has
  • 4 k/cal
  • 1 gram of fat has 9 k/cal
  • Energy in food measured in kilocalories
    (calories).
  • Kilocalorie is the amount of energy needed to
    raise the temperature of 1 kilogram (a little
    more than 4 cups) of water 1 degree Celsius.

6
Calories from Food
  • A balanced diet of carbohydrate, protein
    and fat should consist of the following
    percentages of your total calories consumed each
    day
  • Note These percentages are for teens.
  • Carbohydrates 45-65
  • Fats 25-35
  • Protein 10-35

7
What do these foods have in common?
  • Did you guess they are all carbohydrates?
  • All foods that contain sugar or starch are
    carbohydrates.

8
Carbohydrates Two Types
  • Complex Carbohydrates
  • (good carbs)
  • Starches
  • Larger sugar molecules, takes longer to be
    broken down and used by body
  • Include
  • Starch many glucose molecules linked together
  • Glycogen made in the body, stored in the
    muscles and livers
  • can be broken down to provide a quick source of
    glucose
  • Fiber made of many glucose molecules
  • found in fruits and vegetables
  • cannot be digested by humans
  • needed for healthy digestive system
  • Simple Carbohydrates
  • (bad carbs)
  • Sugars
  • Small molecule, broken down and used quickly as
    fuel
  • Include
  • Glucose (blood sugar)
  • Only form of sugar that the body can convert to
    usable energy
  • Fructose
  • found naturally in fruit and honey
  • Lactose (milk sugar)
  • made by animals
  • found in dairy products
  • Sucrose (table sugar)
  • found in candies

9
Sugars Simple Carbs
  • Provides energy for cells in the form of glucose
  • All forms of sugar must be broken down into
    glucose before can be used by body for energy
  • Some found naturally in foods (milk, fruits,
    vegetables)
  • Some sugars added to foods (candy, baked goods,
    cereals)

10
Starches Complex Carbs
  • Type of complex carbohydrate
  • Many sugar molecules hooked together
  • Eaten in food and broken down into simple sugars
    then be used by body
  • Mostly in plant foods
  • Starchy vegetables - potatoes, legumes (beans and
    peas) grains (rice, corn, wheat)
  • Daily Recommendation 45-65 of calories in
    diet should come from carbohydrates.
  • Most of calories should come from complex
    carbohydrates

11
Fiber Complex Carb
  • Type of complex carbohydrate
  • Provides little energy
  • Cannot be digested by humans
  • Absolutely necessary for digestion keeps
  • colon healthy
  • Moves material through intestine preventing
  • constipation
  • Helps prevent colon cancer and heart disease
  • Two Types of Fiber
  • Soluble Fiber dissolves in water, holds water
    in intestine increasing volume of material in
    digestive tract, help protect from heart disease,
    traps bad cholesterol in food eaten (lowers blood
    cholesterol)
  • Insoluble Fiber adds bulk to feces, found in
    hard or stringy part of fruit, vegetables,
    legumes, whole grains

12
What do these foods have in common?
  • If you were thinking they are all fats, you are
    correct. Question are all dietary fats the
    same?

13
Fats (and oils) Lipids
  • Essential nutrient (our bodies need it to
    function properly)
  • Adds texture, flavor, aroma to food
  • Eating too much or the wrong kind - weight gain,
    heart disease, and cancer
  • Fats - large molecules called triglycerides

14
Facts About Fat (Lipids)
  • Essential nutrient. (We need it).
  • Provides energy, main form of energy storage in
    the body.
  • Too little - lead to deficiency
  • Too much - weight gain.
  • Too much of the bad kind of fat can raise blood
    cholesterol levels
  • Provides warmth and cushion
  • Needed to make regulatory hormones, coating on
    nerve cells
  • Add taste, texture to food, make us feel full.

15
Types of Lipids
  • Saturated Fats
  • Most saturated fats -solid at room temperature
  • Come from animal sources (meat, milk, ice cream,
    butter).
  • Plant sources oils are hydrogenated become
    solid at room temperature (margarine made from
    corn oil)
  • Unsaturated Fats
  • Come from plants
  • Tend to be liquid at room temperature
  • Examples corn oil, safflower oil, olive oil,
    sesame oil

16
Unsaturated Fats (Good Fats)
  • Monounsaturated Fats
  • Good fats help lower risk of heart disease
  • Found in olive oil, canola oil, and peanut oil
  • Polyunsaturated Fats
  • Examples corn oil, sunflower oil, soybean oil
  • Omega-3 oil found in fish and seafood is a
    polyunsaturated fat that can provide extra
    protection against heart disease

17
Dietary Fats and Lipids to Eat With Caution
  • Transfats
  • Unsaturated fats formed when vegetables oils are
    made into hard margarines
  • Labeled hydrogenated vegetable oils
  • Increase the risk of heart disease
  • Make processed foods go crunch
  • Cholesterol
  • Necessary for certain body functions
  • Our liver makes cholesterol
  • Found only in animals food sources (meats,
    fish, poultry, milk and eggs), not in plants
  • Stick to inside of arteries to form plaque
  • Increases chances of heart disease and stroke

18
Proteins
  • What are your favorite protein rich foods?

19
Proteins
  • Muscle, skin, hair, and nails made mostly of
    protein
  • Protein helps build new cells, repair existing
    ones
  • Needed to form hormones, enzymes and antibodies
  • If not used immediately as fuel - stored as fat
  • Made up of long molecule chains called amino
    acids
  • 20 different amino acids in the body
  • All 20 needed to make new cells
  • 11 of the 20 can be made by the body
    (nonessential)
  • 9 other amino acids must come from food
    (essential)

20
Complete and Incomplete Proteins
  • Complete Proteins foods that contain all 20
    amino acids that are necessary to build and
    repair tissue
  • Foods Any animal source
  • (milk, eggs, fish,
    beef, chicken,
  • cheese)
  • Incomplete Proteins foods that do not contain
    all 20 essential amino acids

21
Creating a complete protein from incomplete
protein foods
  • Combining different grains, legumes, nuts, fruits
    and vegetables will create a complete protein
    food that is low in fat.
  • Examples - bean and rice burrito
  • - peanut butter and jelly sandwich
  • on whole wheat bread
  • - mixed green salad with nuts,
  • beans and vegetables

22
Vitamins and Minerals
  • Function of Dietary Vitamins and Minerals
  • Help the body work properly
  • Build the immune system
  • Support growth and development
  • Help organs and cells work properly
  • Build bones and teeth
  • Assist body in using carbohydrates for energy

23
Two Types of Vitamins
  • Fat Soluble Vitamins
  • Dissolve in fat
  • Stored in fat tissue in body
  • Vitamins A, D, E, K
  • Best food sources dark green vegetables, whole
    grains, peas, nuts, beans
  • Water Soluble Vitamins
  • Dissolve in water
  • Not stored in body urinated out if not used
  • Vitamins B1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 12, folate (B9), Biotin
    (B7), C
  • Best food sources meat, grains, nuts, eggs,
    beans, fruits, vegetables

24
Fat-Soluble Vitamins
  • Vitamin / Foods That Have It
  • Vitamin E Vegetable oils, beans, peas, nuts,
    dark-green vegetables, whole grains
  • Vitamin K Leafy vegetables (spinach, kale,
    broccoli) also produced in intestine by bacteria
  • What It Does
  • Protects cell membranes from damage by connecting
    to free radicals in blood (extra oxygen atoms)
    that can cause damage to cells
  • Aids in blood clotting

25
Water-Soluble VitaminsNot stored in body.
Needed for release of energy from carbohydrates,
fats and proteins.
  • What It Does
  • Needed to produce energy from foods eaten,
    for metabolism and other important body functions
  • Promotes healthy gums and teeth, aids wound
    healing, aids iron absorption, acts as
    antioxidant protects body cells from damage
  • Vitamin / Foods that Have It
  • B1, B2, B3, B5, B6, B12 breads, cereals, beans,
    meat, dairy products, eggs, green vegetables
  • Vitamin C- Citrus fruits, melons, strawberries,
    green vegetables, peppers

26
Minerals
  • Needed for processes -enzyme activity, bone
    formation
  • Needed in small amounts
  • 20 essential for good health
  • Taking a vitamin and mineral supplement can
    prevent nutrient deficiency (not having enough of
    a nutrient to maintain good health)
  • Best source for vitamins FOOD, NOT VITAMIN PILL
  • Calcium
  • Chromium
  • Copper
  • Fluoride
  • Iodine
  • Iron
  • Magnesium
  • Potassium
  • Phosphorus
  • Selenium
  • Sodium
  • Sulfur
  • Zinc

27
Water
  • Can only live few days without water
  • Essential for all body functions
  • Extra water cannot be stored in body must take
    in water as it leaves your body (sweat, urine,
    feces, breathing)
  • Must take in at least 2.5 quarts per day to
    replace normal water loss
  • Can get water from foods
  • About 80-90 of weight of fruits and vegetables
    is water
  • Caffeine / alcoholic beverages causes body to
    excrete extra water
  • Dehydration can cause thirst, headache, fatigue,
    loss of appetite, dry eyes and mouth, nausea,
    confusion and constipation
  • When you sweat you lose water weight (not fat)
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