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Course contents:

Al Neelain University Faculty of Medicine Sem.(7) Primary Health Care Course-Nutrition Nutrition and Health Dr.Abeer Abuzeid Atta Elmannan Ali. Course contents:. Dietary constituents. Balanced diet. Assessment of nutritional status. Nutritional surveillance. Nutritional indicators.

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Course contents:

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  1. Al Neelain University Faculty of MedicineSem.(7)Primary Health Care Course-NutritionNutrition and HealthDr.AbeerAbuzeid Atta Elmannan Ali

  2. Course contents: • Dietary constituents. • Balanced diet. • Assessment of nutritional status. • Nutritional surveillance. • Nutritional indicators. • Common nutritional problems. • Foodbornediseases.

  3. Session Outlines Section I: Introduction to Nutrition • What is Nutrition? • Dietary Constituents • Classification of foods. • What is a balanced Diet? • Principles of Balanced Diet. Section II: Vitamin A Deficiency • Sources of Vit.A, & Requirements • Deficiency. • Treatment. • Prevention & Control.

  4. Definitions: Nutrition: The science of food and its relationship to health. Good nutrition: Maintaining a nutritional status that enables us to grow well and enjoy good health Dietetics: Practical application of the principles of nutrition

  5. Dietary constituents

  6. Nutrients Macronutrients: Proteins ,fats and carbohydrates. Micronutrients: Vitamins and minerals.

  7. Classification of foods Classification by origin: 1- foods of animal origin. 2- Foods of vegetable origin. Classification by chemical composition: 1-proteins 2-carbohydrates 3- fats 4- minerals 5- vitamins.

  8. Classification of foods Classification by predominant function: 1- body-building foods. 2- Energy-giving foods. 3- Protective foods. Classification by nutritive value: 1- cereals 2- vegetables 3- fruits…….ect

  9. Balanced diet: Diet which contains a variety of foods in such quantities and proportions that the need for all nutrients is adequately met for maintaining health, and general wellbeing and also makes small provision for extra nutrients to withstand short duration of leanness.

  10. Principles of constructing balanced diet: • Daily requirement of protein should be met.(15-20% of daily energy intake). • Fat s limited to 20-30% • Carbohydrates rich in natural fiber should constitute the remaining food energy. • Requirements for micronutrients should be met.

  11. WHO Dietary goals: • Fat should be limited to about 20-30%. • Saturated fats should be not more than 10%. • High consumption of refined CHO should be avoided. • Restrict sources rich in energy. • Salt intake should be reduced. • Proteins should account for 1—20% • Junk foods should be reduced.

  12. Vitamin A deficiency

  13. Vitamin A Vit. A covers both - pre-formed vitamin, retinol - pro-vitamin ,beta carotene. Functions: - Vision - Epithelial integrity - Immune response - Growth - Fertility

  14. Sources of Vit.A • Animal foods. • Plant foods. • Fortified foods

  15. Sources • Retinol is fat-soluble • naturally present in foods from animal sources only, for example in dairy products and liver.

  16. Sources: • In plants, only precursors are found, i.e. the so-called pro-vitamin A substances, such as carotene . • They are particularly common in green leafy

  17. Vit.A Storage & Transport • Stored in the liver mostly in firm of retinol palmitate. • A well fed person has a reserve to meet his needs for 6-9 months. • Free Retinol is highly active nd toxic, and therefore is transported in blood stream in combination with Retinol –binding protein. • In severe protein deficiency ,mobilization of liver retinol reserves is impaired …… Why?

  18. Vit.A Toxicity: • Nausea • Vomiting • Sleep disorders. • Enlarged liver Vit. A has teratogenic effects

  19. What is Vit.A Deficiency? • Vitamin A deficiency is a condition that results from inadequate quantities of vitamin A in the body. • Lack of vitamin A (vitamin A deficiency) can damage the immune system, making people more likely to suffer from infections. • Severe vitamin A deficiency can lead to eye problems, poor vision and irreversible blindness. • Vitamin A deficiency is the major cause of blindness in children.

  20. Who is at risk of developing vitamin A deficiency ? • Newborn babies who are not given collostrum (first breast milk) • Infants who are not breastfed • Infants born or breastfed from mothers with vitamin A deficiency • Infants born with very low weight (under 2.5 Kilos) • Children between 6 months and 6 years of age • Children who are malnourished and suffer from measles, diarrhoeaand other infections • School-age children, pregnant adolescent girls and elderly people • People of any age who are malnourished and do not have a diet rich in vitamin A

  21. What causes vitamin A deficiency? • Vitamin A deficiency is caused by a poor diet that does not contain enough foods rich in vitamin A to meet the body’s needs. • Oil or fat in the diet is needed to help the body absorb vitamin A from foods. • It is also caused by measles, diarrhoea and other infections and repeated illnesses that block absorption and cause the body to lose or use up stores of vitamin A more quickly.

  22. Magnitude of Vitamin A Deficiency • Contributing factor in 2.2 million deaths each year from diarrhea and 1 million deaths from measles among preschool children under five. • Severe deficiency can also cause irreversible corneal damage, leading to partial or total blindness. • Vit.Acan reduce by half the number of deaths due to measles.

  23. Magnitude of Vitamin A Deficiency • Pre-school children • Clinically deficient: 3 million (Asia and Africa) • Subclinically deficient (low serum retinol): 100-140 million • 250,000-500,000 become blind each year • 90 % case fatality among those who become blind • Pregnant women • 25%-30% cases of night blindness reported in some countries

  24. Assessment of Vit.A Deficiency WHO Criteria (The presence of any one criteria should be considered as evidence of Xerophthalmia problem in the community)

  25. What are the effects of vitamin A deficiency? • Eye problems, poor vision and in severe cases, permanent blindness. • Diseases of the respiratory and digestive systems. • Repeated illnesses, because the body’s defencemechanism is low, and general poor health. • Poor growth and development in children.

  26. Manifestations of Vit.A Deficiency: • Predominantly Ocular • Extra-Occular Xerophthalmia (Dry eye): Comprises all the ocular manifestations of vit.A deficiency ranging from night blindness to keratomalacia

  27. Ocular manifestations( Xerophthamia) • Most common in children aged 1-3 years. • Related to weaning. • Often associated with PEM. • Risk factors include: • Ignorance • Faulty feeding practices. • Infections.

  28. Ocular manifestations( Xerophthamia) • Night blindness • Conjunctivalxerosis. • Bitot`s spots. • Corneal xerosis. • Keratomalacia..

  29. Ocular Manifestations( Xerophthamia) Night blindness: Inability to see in dim light. Conjunctivalxerosis: Drying of the conjunctivalsurface. Bitot’sspots: Cheesy or foamy patches of keratinisedcells. Corneal xerosis: Drying and keratinisation of the corneal surface; hazy, opaque Appearance. Keratomalacia: Liquefaction of the cornea. It is a grave medical emergency.It is also a major cause of Blindness. (softening of the cornea).

  30. Extra-ocular manifestations: • Follicular hyperkeratosis. • Anorexia. • Growth retardation. • Increased child mortality and morbidity due to respiratory and intestinal infections. .

  31. How can vitamin A deficiency be treated? • Effective treatment of vitamin A deficiency depends on early identification of the problem. Blindness caused by severe vitamin A deficiency is preventable but not curable. • Treatment of severe vitamin A deficiency: • A child with any signs of eye problems, such as night blindness (chicken eyes) or dry eyes, needs urgent medical attention and vitamin A supplements. • • People suffering from vitamin A deficiency need to eat foods rich in vitamin A and foods fortified with vitamin A. • Proper treatment of diarrhoea, malnutrition, measles,malariaand tuberculosis.

  32. Treatment: • Early stages: 200,000 IU or 110 mg of retinol palmitate. Orally on two successive days. • All children with corneal ulcers should be given vit.A.

  33. Prevention and control: • Short-term action. (Supplementation) • Medium-term action. (Fortification) • Long-term action. (Reduction of factors contributing to the disease)

  34. Interventions to Control VAD • In 1999, only 10 countries provided two rounds of VA supplementation with high coverage, this has increased to over 50 countries by 2004. • Between 1998 and 2004, UNICEF estimates that about two million child deaths may have been prevented. • Food Fortification - A number of countries are successfully fortifying foods with vitamin A (e.g. sugar, maize flour, wheat) reaching large populations.

  35. VA Supplementation Coverage Where VAD is a public health problem (U5MR>70) 70% or more 30 to 69% Less than 30% No data available 1 Percent of children aged 6-59 months who received at least one vitamin A supplement within the last six months Source: UNICEF (2000)

  36. THANK YOU

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