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NUTRITION

NUTRITION. A proper diet requires a balance of carbohydrates, fats, and proteins. In addition the body requires many phytochemicals, vitamins, minerals, enzymes, and water. Food Intake. Food energy measured in Calories Carbohydrates - obtained primarily through plants

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NUTRITION

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  1. NUTRITION • A proper diet requires a balance of carbohydrates, fats, and proteins. In addition the body requires many phytochemicals, vitamins, minerals, enzymes, and water.

  2. Food Intake • Food energy measured in Calories • Carbohydrates - • obtained primarily through plants • Monosaccharides used for cellular fuel • Minimum carbohydrates = 100 g/day

  3. Lipids < 30% of calories • Mostly triglycerides • Saturated fats usually from animals • Cholesterol only from animals • Neutral fats provide insulation and energy reserves • Phospholipids for membranes and myelin • Cholesterol for membranes, vitamin D, steroid hormones, and bile salts

  4. Proteins = 0.8 g/kg of body wt • 8 Essential amino acids • Plants usually lack 1 or more essential amino acids / Animal protein usually contains all • Amino acids used to build structural proteins and enzymes

  5. VITAMINS: "vita" = Latin word for life. • Vitamins are organic substances that act as coenzymes, chemicals that assist the enzymes in the bodies reactions. They do not provide energy or calories. • Vitamins may be either Fat Soluble or Water Soluble.

  6. Fat soluble vitamins • are stored in the body's fatty tissues. Fat soluble vitamins include the vitamins • A • D • E • K.

  7. Vitamin A • Found in fish, liver, eggs, butter, yellow & green vegetables, fruits • Needed for healthy skin, eyes, bones, teeth. • Deficiency causes night blindness, skin disorders, kidney stones

  8. Vitamin D • Found in liver, fish, eggs, milk, sunlight • Needed for growth, healthy bones, metabolism of calcium & phosphorus • Deficiency causes rickets, poor teeth and bones.

  9. Vitamin E • Found in whole grains, leafy vegetables, milk, butter, vegetable oils • Needed for healthy cell membranes, red blood cells • Deficiency causes red cell rupture, muscle disorders

  10. Vitamin K • Found in leafy vegetables, soybeans, made by intestinal bacteria • Needed for normal blood clotting • Deficiency causes slow clotting, hemorrhaging.

  11. Water soluble vitamins • can be dissolved in water but cannot be stored in the tissues. • They must be obtained each day from food.

  12. B1 (Thiamine) B2 (Riboflavin) Niacin B6 (Pyridoxine) Pantothenic Acid Biotin B12 Folic Acid C (Ascorbic acid) Water soluble vitamins include

  13. Vitamin B1 (Thiamine) • Found in organ meats, whole grains, vegetables • Needed for proper functioning of heart, nervous system, digestion • Deficiency causes beriberi, cardiovascular disorders.

  14. Vitamin B2 (Riboflavin) • Found in liver, poultry, milk, eggs, cheese, fish, green vegetables, whole grain • Needed for metabolism of protein, carbohydrates, and fats, healthy skin • Used to make FAD for metabolism • Deficiency causes dim vision, premature aging, sore mouth

  15. Vitamin B6 (Pyridoxine) • Found in meats, liver, whole grains, vegetables • Needed for sodium and phosphorus balance • Deficiency causes anemia, nausea, loss of appetite, nervousness

  16. Vitamin B12 • Found in Liver, meats, eggs, cheese, dairy products • Needed for red cell production, healthy nervous system. • Deficiency causes pernicious anemia.

  17. Vitamin C • Found in citrus and other fruits, leafy vegetables, tomatoes, potatoes • Needed for healthy blood vessels, resistance to infection, healing • Deficiency causes scurvy, bruising, bleeding gums

  18. Niacin • Found in red meats, organ meats, fish, green vegetables • Needed for metabolism, digestion, nerves, skin • Used to make NAD for metabolism • Deficiency causes pellagra, sore mouth, diarrhea, depression

  19. Folic Acid • Found in green vegetables, liver, whole grains, legumes • Needed for manufacture of proteins and red blood cells, needed for cell division, helps prevent spina bifida • Deficiency causes inflamed tongue, diarrhea, B12 deficiency.

  20. MINERALS: • Inorganic substances that are used in the chemical reactions of the body. • Major minerals needed include: • Calcium, Iodine, Iron, Magnesium, Phosphorus, Potassium, and Sodium. 

  21. Calcium • Found in milk, cheese, vegetables • Needed for strong bones and teeth, blood clotting

  22. Iodine • Found in seafoods, iodized salt • Needed for normal thyroid metabolism, prevents goiter

  23. Iron • Found in liver, meat, eggs • Needed for red cell production, prevents anemia

  24. Magnesium • Found in milk, meat, whole grains, legumes • Needed for proper nerve and muscle functioning

  25. Phosphorus • Found in milk, whole grains, meats, nuts, legumes • Needed for tooth and bone development, ATP, nucleic acids

  26. Potassium • Found in whole grains, fruits, legumes, meat • Needed for proper nerve and muscle function

  27. Sodium • Found in seafood, table salt • Needed for water balance, proper nerve and muscle function

  28. Free Radicals charged molecules that become oxidized by combining with oxygen or the removal of hydrogen, causing electron deficiency. seek to regain the electron by removing it from other molecules, thus oxidizing them. set up a chain reaction that may damage cell structures such as DNA, cell membranes, or needed enzymes.

  29. Free radicals may be produced by normal metabolic processes, the immune system in response to disease, exposure to chemicals, toxins, or radiation. Free radical generation may be increased by exercise and stress.

  30. Damage caused by free radical generation is a major cause of the degenerative effects of aging, may cause cancers, damage to arterial walls leading to heart disease and/or stroke, and lead to other degenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s.

  31. Antioxidants have a protective effect by neutralizing free radicals. best known antioxidants are Vitamin C, Vitamin E, and beta carotene. many others and possibly many yet to be discovered. proper number, types, and balance of is an important part of nutrition.

  32. METABOLISM Sum of all the chemical reactions occurring within the body

  33. Types of Metabolic Reactions • Anabolic reactions - energy requiring synthesis reactions • Catabolic reactions - energy releasing reactions that generate ATP

  34. Enzymes - globular proteins that act as catalysts • Increase reaction rates • Holoenzyme - a two-part enzyme consisting of a protein part and an organic cofactor • Apoenzyme - the protein portion • Coenzyme - the organic cofactor; usually a vitamin

  35. Energy Production • Oxidation reactions - loss of an electron by an atom or molecule • Reduction reactions - involves the gain of electrons by a molecule • Coupled redox reactions

  36. Cellular Respiration Oxidation of Glucose

  37. Glucose Metabolism • Glycolysis • Acetyl Coenzyme A • Krebs Cycle • Electron Transport Chain

  38. Glycolysis • Glucose molecules are broken down into two molecules of pyruvic acid in the cytoplasm of the cell • Net gain of 2 molecules of ATP • No oxygen required • Fate of pyruvic acid depends on the oxygen availability

  39. Glycolysis • Glucose C6H12O6 • Glucose-6-phosphate ATP • Fructose-6-phosphate ADP ATP • Fructose 1,6, diphosphate ADP • Glyceraldehyde-3-Phosphate or Dihydroxyacetone Phosphate • 2Pyruvate (pyruvic acid) + 2NAD + 4ATP • 2C3H4O3 + 2NADH+ + 2ATP (net)

  40. Acetyl CoA Formation • Pyruvic acid is decarboxylated by the removal of CO2 into a two carbon acetyl group • Occurs in the mitochondria of the cell

  41. Krebs Cycle - TCA Cycle • Formation of citric acid when oxaloacetic acid combines with acetyl CoA • Organic molecules are broken down, carbon dioxide is released and hydrogen atoms are removed & transferred by coenzymes NAD & FAD

  42. Kreb’s Cycle • Acetyl CoA + Oxalocetic Acid • Citric Acid • Isocitric Acid CO2 NADH2 • alpha-Ketoglutaric Acid CO2 NADH2 • Succinyl CoA ATP • Succinnic Acid FADH2 • Fumaric Acid • Malic Acid NADH2

  43. Electron Transport • Involves electron carrier molecules that will release energy in a controlled way • This energy is used to generate ATP • Occurs inner mitochondrial membrane • Chemiosmosis

  44. Glucose Anabolism • Glycogenesis - conversion of glucose to glycogen; stimulated by insulin • Glycogenolysis - hydrolysis of glycogen to form glucose; stimulated by glucagon • Gluconeogenesis - synthesis of glucose from non-carbohydrates such as fats and amino acids

  45. Lipid Metabolism

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